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MillionDollarVocabularyManual PDF
MillionDollarVocabularyManual PDF
Million Dollar
Vocabulary Playbook
The course manual is for your personal use only and is to be used with the six audio recordings
from the Million Dollar Vocabulary Personal Learning Course.
All worldwide rights are reserved and exclusively owned by Learning Strategies Corporation. No
part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in part or in whole in any form or by
any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of
Learning Strategies Corporation.
Copyright 1999 by Learning Strategies Corporation
Paraliminal, Natural Brilliance, PhotoReading, EasyLearn, Personal Celebration, and
Accelements are exclusive trademarks of Learning Strategies Corporation worldwide. Spring
Forest Qigong is a registered trademark of Chunyi Lin. Diamond Feng Shui and the Diamond
Feng Shui Diamond are trademarks of Marie Vyncke-Diamond.
ISBN 13: 978-0-925480-64-4
ISBN 10: 0-925480-64-9
FIRST EDITION
June 1999
Printed in the United States of America
For coaching and additional support, visit our online Discussion Forum
at www.LearningStrategies.com
v042507
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Tracks
8
9
10
11-12
13
14
15
16-17
18
Word Blast
Developing a Powerful Vocabulary
The Distinguished Dozen
10 Important Words from
Business/Law/Finance & Quick Quiz
Nature & History of English
10 Interesting Words & Quick Quiz
More English Language Heritage
12 Words & Quick Quiz
Bennettdiction & Word Blast
Alphabet Soup
Tracks
1 Word Blast
2 Polysyllabic Profundity Proverb
& The Distinguished Dozen
3-5 40 Power Charged Words
& Quick Quiz
6 Quick Quiz
7 Bennettdiction & Word Blast
Learning to Learn
Tracks
8 Word Blast
9 Polysyllabic Profundity Proverb
& The Distinguished Dozen
10-11 Keys to Learning to Learn
& Quick Quiz
12 Immediate Recall Quick Quiz
13 10 High-Utility Action Words
14 Spell Checker Quick Quiz
15 Bennettdiction & Word Blast
Tracks
1
2
3-4
5
6-7
8-9
10
Word Blast
Polysyllabic Profundity Proverb
& The Distinguished Dozen
Effective Listening
6 Most Productive Methods of
Vocabulary Development
Useful Words & Quick Quiz
Homonyms, Homophones,
Homographs & Quick Quiz
Bennettdiction & Word Blast
Word Play
Tracks
11 Word Blast
12 Polysyllabic Profundity Proverb
& The Distinguished Dozen
13 Word Play & Four-letter Words
14 Spoonerisms, Freudian Slips,
Malapropisms, & Puns
15 Vocabulary Preview for this Lesson
16-18 Frequently Misinterpreted
Four-letter Words
19 Bennettdiction & Word Blast
I Love Words
Tracks
10 Word Blast
11 Polysyllabic Profundity Proverb
& The Distinguished Dozen
12 I Love Words
13 What Goes Around, Comes Around
14 Love Over 30
15-18 5 Noble Nouns, Vivacious Verbs,
Awesome Adjectives & Quick Quiz
19 Final Bennettdiction & Word Blast
Paraliminal Learning
Session 1
Tracks
1-3 (28 Mins)
Paraliminal Learning
Session 2
Tracks
1-3 (28 Mins)
Table of Contents
Lesson 1 - The Wonderful World of Words, 4
Lesson 2 - English Language, History and Development, 8
Lesson 3 - Alphabet Soup, 12
Lesson 4 - Learning to Learn, 16
Lesson 5 - From Painting to Professoring, 19
Lesson 6 - Reading and the Reader, 23
Lesson 7 - Listen My Children, and You Shall Hear..., 28
Lesson 8 - Word Play, 33
Lesson 9 - Sail on the Seven Cs, 37
Lesson 10 - I Love Words, 41
Answers to Matching Challenges, 46
Answers to Crossword Puzzles, 47
Glossary, 49
Open Your Whole Mind to New Ways for Learning, 61
About the Author, 64
immersion,
nascent,
inchoate,
dendrites,
neuronal,
cerebral hemispheres,
sensory,
metacognition,
concomitant,
enabling,
substantive,
arbitrarily,
capriciously,
replete,
modus operandi,
in toto,
acrimonious,
acrid,
animus,
magnanimous,
doctrine,
fey,
clairvoyant,
ode,
vie,
anthropocentric,
centrifuge,
carpe diem,
repondez sil vous plait,
incipient,
whimsical,
temporizing,
hominines,
consigned,
irrevocably,
oblivion,
serendipitously,
cumbersome,
parenthetically,
juxtaposition,
purloined,
filched,
joie de vivre,
lollapalooza,
auscultation,
deflagrate,
per se,
germane,
apropos,
cheerio
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1
The Wonderful World
of Words
The Pleasures and Benefits of Building a Million
Dollar Vocabulary
A hearty welcome and congratulations to you for taking a big step towards selfimprovement, self-actualization, and self-confidence! You are embarking on a vocabulary
adventure unequalled in effectiveness. Get ready to playfully explore over 600 words to improve
your ability to express yourself and understand others.
Scientists have shown us that a brain immersed in learning busily grows dendrites, the
essential interconnections that link brain cells together. The more you engage your whole brain
with sounds, images, feelings, games, puzzles, and rich challenging experiences, the more densely
you grow the useful connections and pathways within your brain. No one can do that for you,
only you can, and you will do it naturally by participating in the lessons of this course.
The more you fully involve yourself, the more easily and quickly your brain takes
possession of your Million Dollar Vocabulary.
Polysyllabic Profundity
Proverb
Word Blast
Notice the lessons words printed in the left column on each chapters first page. Quickly
run your eyes down the list to refresh and reinforce your learning and to organize your thoughts
in advance of experiencing the chapters full content.
No strain; no gain
Three Latin Invaders
ac or acr: sharp; bitter:
as in, acid; acute; acrid;
acrimonious
anim: life; mind; soul; spirit:
as in, unanimous; animosity;
animus; magnanimous
doc: to teach: as in, doctor;
doctrine; doctrinaire;
documentation
Three Little Words
fey: clairvoyant; enchanted;
magical; My friend Flicka is a
fey and gifted person.
ode: a lyrical poem of praise;
A toad cant write an ode, but
I can.
vie: to compete: to contest;
The boys vied for Debbies
attention.
Three Greek Gifts
anthro or andr: man;
human: as in, anthropology;
android; anthropocentric;
philanthropist
arch or archi or archy:
meaning chief; principal;
ruler: as in, architect;
monarchy; archenemy;
hierarchy
centr: center: as in,
concentrate; eccentric;
centrifuge; egocentric
Three Purloined Foreignlanguage Expressions
carpe diem: enjoy the day; Stop
dawdling Ernesto, carpe diem.
modus operandi: method of
operating; The modus operandi
of this course is whole-brain
learning.
repondez sil vous plait or
RSVP: (in English) please
reply; Please RSVP so we can
know how many are coming.
Bennettdiction
We must remember the Bennett-diction, Paul Scheeles term for a Thought for the
Day, and a nice play on the word benediction, or blessing. These are words to ponder, to
live by, to learn by. An example would be Ben Franklins, Nothing ventured; nothing gained.
Its insightful, wise, and appropriate to the larger lesson at hand. Equally germane to us now
is this thought: To discover new oceans, you must be willing to lose sight of the shore.
Lollapalooza
Matching Challenge
Matching Challenge
For each word in the left column
find a definition from the right
column.
Answers are listed on Page 46.
There are three strategies you
can follow:
1. Do the Matching Challenge
before beginning a lesson. This
will focus your attention on the
new words to learn.
2. Do the Matching Challenge
after completing a lesson. This
will reinforce the new words
and their meanings.
3. Do both! This is the best
way to learn. When doing the
Matching Challenge the first
time, write your answers on
another sheet of paper.
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1. arbitrary: ______
2. capricious: ______
3. glean: ______
4. in toto: ______
5. abscond: ______
6. bellicose: ______
7. serendipity: ______
8. juxtapose: ______
9. temporize: ______
10. hominines: ______
11. consigned: _____
12. oblivion: ______
13. joie de vivre: ______
14. deflagrate: ______
15. per se: ______
16. sans: ______
17. operose: ______
18. accrete: ______
19. fey: ______
20. ode: ______
21. vie: ______
22. carpe diem: ______
23. modus operandi: ______
24. repondez sil vous plait
or RSVP: ______
25. inchoate: ______
Glossary
A comprehensive glossary is included at the back of this playbook. Sometimes
you will find multiple definitions of a word. You may even notice that definitions in the
glossary vary from definitions provided in other sections of the playbook. This will help
you learn the nuances of the English language.
Bennettdiction
The difference between the right word, and the almost right word, is the difference
between lightning and the lightning bug. Mark Twain
Cheerio
Down
1. The act of listening
2. Unselfish, big-hearted
3. Erratic in behavior;
fanciful
5. Impulsively
7. A lyric poem
8. Occurring in
company with
11. To strive for victory
16. Bitingly hostile in nature
17. Difficult to handle; bulky
19. Beginning to exist
or appear
20. Fitting
21. Absorbed
23. Early stage; incipient
24. To come forth; emerge
25. To separate by spinning
Million Dollar Vocabulary
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2
English Language History
and Development
Financial Success and Prosperity
Our Polysyllabic Profundity Proverb for this lesson is: Pulchritude possesses solely
cutaneous profundity.
That set of words is a long way to go if one simply wishes to caution that, Beauty is only
skin deep, isnt it? Having recognized that, though, we also need to recognize the important
fact that knowing, and being able to use pulchritude, cutaneous, and profundity correctly
and appropriately can be very useful in certain situationsespecially if you need to be very
specific or very precise. That is, to be clear, concise, complete, and correct in your listening,
speaking, writing, and reading. Vocabulary power for an educated and capable person is not
the icing on the cake; vocabulary power is the cake.
Pulchritude means beauty, but it also means appeal. Why is that important? Because
not all beautiful persons are appealing; theyre just accidentally physically gorgeous, and their
beauty really is only skin deep. Pulchritude implies and suggests voluptuous beauty, such as
Marilyn Monroe possessed, as distinguished from austere beauty, like that of Mona Lisa.
Cutaneous refers to skin. Knowing that fact marks you as a person with a knowledge
of biology as well as vocabulary, and indicates an understanding on your part of our Latin
language heritage, as well.
Profundity refers to something profound, but it is also means abstruse, that is, difficult to
understand, and it means recondite, meaning concealed or hidden. And, since profundity has
taken on, as a feeling, a rather negative connotation, the most common dictionary-denotation
might be something like overdone; unnecessarily profound.
So it goes, and so it grows, one word leading to another word, and voila! (from the
French meaning, There it is! or There you are!) you possess a deep, wide, powerful
vocabulary, and all the things that go with such a vocabulary. Coincidentally, thats just our goal
and purpose in this personal learning courseto empower you toward developing a deep,
wide, powerful vocabulary.
Many people seem unaware of the importance of words in achieving success. Perhaps
they fail to realize how much they are influenced by use of the proper word at the proper
time, or they are oblivious or naive as to how their own speech or writing is evaluated by
other persons.
To understand and appreciate English one must appreciate the fact that the English
language is a polyglota wonderful combination of many languages. The language we call
English was originally a German dialect, and is still Germanic in its structure. The words
themselves, however, come from many sources.
As a result of exchanges with other cultures, ranging from war and conquest, to trade
and commerce, to works of literature, we have borrowed widely. In fact, we have procured
so many words from Latin, either directly or through French as an intermediary, that
we would be more accurate to describe English as Anglo-Latin rather than Anglo-Saxon.
English also has borrowed many words from Greek, especially in the fields of science and
technology, as you will notice in the Three Greek Gifts entries.
A few modern English words are of Celtic origin, surviving from the languages of
the so-called barbaric people called Celts who inhabited Britain before the coming of
the Romans in the second century A.D. A few other words, such as camp, street, and
mile, were left by the Romans themselves. When the Angles and the Saxons overran the
land in the fifth century, they incorporated into their own language certain Celtic and Latin
words, which survive today. Subsequent Danish (i.e. Viking) invasions added many words
to the English tongue. The most significant and permanent changes were yet to come,
however. When the Normans conquered England in 1066 A.D., English was principally
Germanic, with as we have noted, a few Celtic words, and some Latin words.
The Normans brought with them their French tongue, which was actually only
a Latin dialect. Neither language was able to absorb the other, and for several hundred
years the language of the ruling class was Norman, while the language of the working
class was Anglo-Saxon.
In time, however, the two became joined together into one. As a result, the grammar
was greatly simplified (believe it or not, Old English had an even more bewildering
grammar than does modern English) and, in many cases, there came to be two different
words with the same meaninga plain Anglo-Saxon word, such as pig, or calf, and a
ritzy Norman word, such as pork, or veal.
Through the ages, English has been continually enriched by the addition of new
words. The result is a complex language of great depth and breadth. Our language can
exhibit all the lilt and charm of the Romance languages, all the precision and gusto of
the Northern European group, and all the versatility and adaptability of Greek and Latin.
The result of all this blending is a unique and potent language.
A very respectable group of sociolinguists maintains that one of the primary
reasons for the business, financial, military, and literary successes of English-speaking
peoples is related to an aspect of the psychology of our language. According to this view,
our language is somehow inherently aggressive, competitive, exacting, and expansive. To
think in English, apparently, is to develop a mindset for forceful, personally responsible
action. What a fascinating ideawe are what we say, and how we say it!
All this borrowing and adopting, however, has also created some problems. English
is considered to be a very difficult language to learn. Rules are hard to come by, and even
grammatical patterns have so many exceptions that they are almost useless to a person
learning English from a book.
English is, in fact, the lingua franca of the world: language of the Franks, meaning
a common language. Its ironic then that our mongrel (as some think of it) language is
Million Dollar Vocabulary
10
Bennettdiction
Yesterdays history; tomorrows a mystery; Todays a giftthats why we call it
the present.
Au revoir
mesmerizing: enthralling;
hypnotic; fascinating
pretentious: making an
extravagant outer show;
ostentatious (like a peacock)
pinnacle: the highest point;
summit; acme
conglomerate: a company
composed of several companies
abjure: to repudiate or
recant solemnly; to renounce
under oath; forswear
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11
Matching Challenge
1. pulchritude: ______
2. cutaneous: _____
3. profundity: _____
4. voila: _____
5. dun: _____
6. nil: _____
7. opt: _____
8. caveat emptor: _____
9. de jure: _____
10. laissez faire: _____
11. usufruct: _____
12. abjure: _____
13. defalcate: _____
14. suborn: _____
15. usurp: _____
16. polyglot: _____
17. inherently: _____
18. exacting: _____
19. expansive: _____
20. mesmerizing: ______
21. pretentious: _____
22. pinnacle: _____
23. torpor: _____
24. turgid: _____
25. tumid: _____
a. legally so
b. to misuse funds; embezzle
c. requiring great care, effort, or attention
d. the highest point; summit; acme
e. the policy of non-interference in business conduct
f. There it is! or There you are!
g. let the buyer beware
h. to pester for payment of a debt
i. apathy; insensibility; lethargy
j. profound; difficult to understand; concealed
k. a mixture of languages
l. overly ornate in style or language; grandiloquent
m. beauty with sex appeal
n. nothing; naught; zilch; nada
o. intrinsic; existing as an essential characteristic
p. to repudiate or recant solemnly
q. swollen; overblown; bombastic
r. enthralling; hypnotic; fascinating
s. the right to use someone elses property
t. choose; decide; go for
u. to induce another to unlawfully commit a misdeed
v. making an extravagant outer show; ostentatious
w. refers to skin
x. wide; sweeping; comprehensive; grand in scale
y. to unrightfully seize power or office
12
hola,
encrustations,
rectitude,
complicity,
denigrate,
coquettish, cacophony,
antipathy,
contiguous,
cest la vie,
neurotic, ado,
cest la guerre,
antipathy,
coy,
nest-ce pas
paleolithic, din,
rapacious,
otiose,
augment,
bereft, cronies,
destitute,
eccentric,
flatulent, gravity,
hiatus, inept,
jejune,
karma,
lachrymose,
mewling,
nihilistic,
opined, puerile,
quirky,
quixotic,
quest, rife,
sententious,
timorous,
umbrage,
vacuous,
wont,
expunge,
extol, exacerbate,
yokefellows,
zymurgy,
deliberation,
pickings, moolah,
civil,
petulant,
chastened,
fold,
minute,
strife,
apocryphal,
adios
3
Alphabet Soup
Fun and Mental Stimulation
May I Have a Word with You?
Arnold determined after much deliberation that he needed to augment his income.
Pickings were getting slim at the familys thyroid ranch, and he needed more moolah, but was
unsure as to an effective methodology. His father was bereft of helpful ideas, and his neurotic
cronies were all destitute, so he turned to his eccentric and flatulent cousin, Marcel.
Marcel was made to understand the gravity of Arnolds needs, but Marcels antipathy for
his family was so strong that he had placed himself on hiatus from involvement in the endless,
inept, and jejune antics of his relatives in their efforts to become rich without working. They all
had bad karma, and their lachrymose mewling over their imagined misfortunes made him shorttempered and nihilistic. Consequently, he opined to Arnold that this puerile and piteous effort
was no more than yet another quirky, quixotic, crazy quest. Well, your life is rife with strife,
too, Arnold shouted in a sententious manner, so keep a civil tongue, Cousin Petulant. Please
remember that you inherited your money from our paleolithic Great-Aunt Bouillabaisse!
Thus chastened, Marcel, who was timorous by nature, pleaded with his cousin not to
take umbrage. Marcels watery, vacuous eyes were begging for forgiveness. Im not wont to
hold a grudge, said Arnold, so grant me three wishes, and Ill take you back into the family
fold. Anything, said Marcel. What are your wishes?
One: Expunge from your minute mind your former negative opinion of my quest for cash.
Two: Extol my virtues to all who will listen.
Three: Exacerbate my plight no more with your insensitivity, said Arnold.
Done, Cousin Arnold, said Marcel. We shall be yokefellows from this day forward.
Excellent, Cousin Marcel, said Arnold. Lets seal our renewed bond with a bit of
the zymurgists magic, while I share another word or two with you about an investment I have
in mind. The End
I hope your family is a little less dysfunctional than the one described. Now might be a
good time to choose your favorite between these two quotable opinions relating to family ties:
1) In our lives, the only thing we really own is our familytreasure it for the treasure it
truly is.
2) In our lives, we get to choose everything except our familywere stuck with them!
I dont knowmaybe they both work at one time or another? And, Im sure we wish
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13
all the best for the Arnolds and the Marcels of the world. Our quest is different, though.
Our quest is for a Million Dollar Vocabulary.
Fold (or flock) has become associated primarily with religion. Petulant,
chastened, strife, and civil (or rather the absence of civility) are all social/psychological
terms which have to do with stress. Finally, mi nute is minute, with a pronunciation
attitude. Incidentally, at a young age I corrected my fathers mispronunciation of mi
nute. That was some time ago, but I still remember the icy reception of my impertinence.
Thats curious because, nowadays, I get paid to help people say and use words to their
best advantage. Cest la vie; cest la guerre; nest-ce pas?
Bennettdiction
When all is said and done, more is said than done.
Adios
14
Polysyllabic Profundity
Proverb
Freedom from encrustations
of grime is contiguous to
rectitude.
Cleanliness is next to
godliness.
Three Latin Invaders
com: (also con; cor; or col)
meaning: together: as in,
complete; complicity
de: away or down: as in,
degrade; derelict
sent: opinion; mind;
awareness: as in, sententious;
sentious; sentient; sentiment
Three Little Words
coy: bashful; modest;
coquettishly shy; The young
secretary was very coy.
din: a loud, unpleasant,
confused noise; cacophony;
Bobs garage band is making
quite a din.
nag: an old horse, to engage
in persistent, petty faultfinding; Nag, nag, nag quit
picking on me!
Matching Challenge
1. contiguous: _____
a. full of gas; bombastic
2. rectitude: _____
b. Such is war
3. coy: _____
c. childish; unsophisticated; also, dull; weak
4. din: _____
d. weepy; tearful
5. nag: _____
e. intrepid virtue and righteousness
6. cest la vie: _____
f. a loud, unpleasant, confused noise; cacophony
7. cest la guerre: _____
g. to engage in persistent, petty, faultfinding
8. nest-ce pas?: _____
h. bashful or modest; coquettishly shy
9. otiose: _____
i. offense; resentment
10. bereft: _____
j. fate; destiny
11. flatulent: _____
k. obliterate: delete
12. hiatus: _____
l. Such is life
13. jejune: _____
m. fearful; timid
14. karma: _____
n. childish; juvenile
15. lachrymose: _____
o. vacant; inane
16. nihilistic: _____
p. the chemistry of fermentation which is the process
17. puerile: _____ used in brewing and distilling
18. quixotic: _____
q. Is it not so?
19. sententious: _____
r. break; pause
20. timorous: _____
s. of questionable authenticity
21. umbrage: _____
t. near; close; touching
22. vacuous: _____
u. from Don Quixote: impractical; hopelessly nave
23. expunge: _____
v. having a lazy nature; indolent; leisurely
24. zymurgy: _____
w. tense and energetic in expression; pithy
25. apocryphal: _____
x. belief that destruction of social institutions is
necessary for future improvement
y. dispossessed; deprived
15
16
fecund,
albeit,
lithic,
conglomerates,
congeries,
viridescent,
biophytes,
surveillance,
ken,
yen,
zen,
metacognition,
sine qua non,
status quo,
tout de suite,
sapid,
gash,
correlative,
puissant,
correlative,
reciprocally,
seminal,
metacognition,
saw,
vernacular,
adjacent,
rendering,
labyrinth,
veracity,
incidental,
stylus,
maze,
impeded,
requisite,
concomitantly,
juncture,
abscond,
cauterize,
deify,
disconcert,
elucidate,
expurgate,
finagle,
prognosticate,
supersede,
truncate,
arrivederci
4
Learning to Learn
Lifelong Learning
Our Polysyllabic Profundity Proverb is Revolving lithic conglomerates accumulate no
congeries of viridescent lycopods, translates to, A rolling stone gathers no moss.
This might have been easier to decipher had you known that lithic conglomerates are
rocks; congeries refer to aggregations or agglomerations; viridescent means green; lycopods
are mosses.
Learning to Learn is an analysis and description of metacognition or thinking about
thinking, which was discovered and named by Edward Robinson, one of Americas first and
best psychologists qua learning theorists.
We should consider a seminal question pondered by all teachers and learners: How
do people learn? What makes a subject easy or hard for a given individual? What makes us
remember/what makes us forget? We need to know the answers to questions such as these:
as individuals, and as a species. What is the key, or set of keys, to learning?
Such questions have intrigued and fascinated learning theorists, psychologists and psychiatrists,
neurologists and biologists, teachers and education researchers, since ancient times.
We have isolated many tried-and-true learning habits which help us search for better
ways to teach and learn. These strategies and practices seem to be effective regardless of subject
matter, delivery system, or individual learning differences.
Of all the things we do know about long-term learning, one of the most efficient and
effective practices might be summed up in the vernacular, or, everyday speech, by saying, Use
it, or lose it. A more formal rendering might be, If you do not in some way apply the things
you learn, those things will quickly fade from your immediate memory. Either way you express
it, one fact is clear: you must practice to learn, but you must learn how to practice.
By way of example, I have for years watched pre-season golfers at the range practice their
slice and duck-hook until they could hit the ball so far out of play that they werent hitting
into the rough, anymorethey were in an adjacent fairway! Obviously, we have to practice the
right and correct things.
It might be helpful to think of practice as consisting of three steps:
One: This is the sine qua non, the absolutely essential factor, of learning: decide why you
need or want to learn whatever skill or subject you are attempting. Focus your thinking.
Two: As far as its possible, receive the knowledge being presented in the best situation
for you personally. It can be a large class, a small group, or a personal learning course. Its
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17
worth mentioning that one of the most appealing aspects of the personal learning course
is the radical and, for many, rewarding departure from the status quo of the lecture hall.
Three: Find a way to use what you learn tout de suitei.e. as soon as possible! Its a
major part of mastery learning, and it works. It works for all persons, in any subject, at
any stage of our lives. As they say, Just do it! Although using knowledge once, or even
twice, may not always result in high proficiency at the task or problem, it will ensure
long-term retention, and a higher-than-usual proficiency called mastery learning. In two
words, take action!
Here are 10 high-utility action words to know and be confident in using.
abscond: to depart hastily and secretly; to flee
cauterize: to sear or close with a hot metal piece
deify: to make a god of; to exalt
disconcert: to embarrass or confuse; upset someone
elucidate: to make clear; to explain
Marlene had clearly elucidated to Larry her shyness, and so she was disconcerted
to the point of wishing she could cauterize his lips together for his pitiful attempt to deify
her in public, and then quickly absconding when people began to laugh.
Another 5 action words are:
expurgate: to remove objectionable material; to purge
finagle: to maneuver; to engineer
procrastinate: to postpone action; to delay
supersede: to take the place of; to supplant
truncate: to shorten; to lop
The well known procrastinator, Elmo Perkins, finagled an opportunity to expurgate
certain unpleasant items from his annual review by truncating the criticisms, and
superseding them with effusive approbation.
Bennettdiction
To not decide, is to decide. Martin Luther
Arrivederci
Lollapalooza
sapid: pleasant to the mind;
engaging
gash: knowing; shrewd; witty;
sharp
puissant: (pyoo-is-unt or
pwee-san) mighty, powerful,
and potent.
18
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Matching Challenge
1. albeit: _____
2. lithic: _____
3. congeries: _____
4. viridescent: _____
5. lycopods: _____
6. surveillance: _____
7. ken: _____
8. yen: _____
9. zen: _____
10. sine qua non: _____
11. status quo: _____
12. tout de suite: _____
13. sapid: _____
14. gash: _____
15. puissant: _____
16. metacognition: _____
17. vernacular: _____
18. requisite: _____
19. abscond: _____
20. cauterize: _____
21. deify: _____
22. disconcert: _____
23. elucidate: _____
24. expurgate: _____
25. truncate: _____
19
unremitting, fealty,
metier,
interludes, hedonistic,
renders,
deflections, hebetudinous,
hobbledehoy,
decipher, sans,
quintessential,
perspicuous,
perspicacious, advocate,
nub, vow, vim,
ebullient, alliteratively,
decimate, metacognition,
euphemism,
euthanasia, euphoria,
eulogy, sans souci,
deja vu,
wunderkind, prodigy,
esurient,
emaciated,
guten Tag, sobriquet,
ostentatiously,
clerisy, bodacious,
quipped, diminutive,
tenured, traverse,
assuredly, Thoreau,
Walden, enterprise,
measured,
tenacity,
bereft, addressograph,
perused,
legacy, indubitably,
verily,
categorically, Falstaff,
Scaramouch,
buffoon,
Humpty Dumpty,
cheekily, peevishly,
ingrate,
vagabond, lucrative,
ennui,
boatswains chair,
banal, insipid, trite,
penchant,
paragon, expedite,
abiding,
alacrity, Horatio Alger,
perseverance,
steeplejacks, listlessness,
sequester,
auf Wiedersehen
5
From Painting to
Professoring
Moving Onward and Upward
Achieving Your Potential
Guten Tag. Ive had many titles in my lifekid; sergeant; boss; and Doc, to name a few.
My college students used the sobriquet, Dr. B. Officially (and ostentatiously), Im introduced
as Doctor J. Michael Bennett, Professor Emeritus of Rhetoric at the University of Minnesota,
Twin Cities. Thats not as unique or as important as it sounds, thoughIm just one of the
many thousands of professors and other members of the clerisy in the world; but Ill take it.
It sounds good, its true, and I think I earned it.
My current title is a bit more exciting and surprising when you know that I was 28
years old (not 18) when I started college, and that I was a house painter/paperhanger by trade.
Thats one bodacious occupational change. Painting and decorating is a fine jobyou spend
your days making the world a more beautiful and pleasant place. I liked it, and I believe I was
very good at it.
But by my personal standards, professoring is better. Its a bit like the rough-and-ready
actor John Wayne who is said to have quipped, Ive been rich and Ive been poor. Rich is
better. Professors usually dont get rich of course, but teaching and researching is a wonderful
way to use your life.
Obviously, Ive taken an alternate route or two in my walk through life and, for, the most
part, Ive done it my way. Such a road takes longer to traverse, one gets bumped around
a little, and stuck in a rut or two, but all roads lead to Rome as they say, and my Rome
was a tenured professorship at one of the largest and best universities in the world. What will
your destination be like? And how will you get there? What will it take for you to get to your
Rome? Will an excellent vocabulary help? I know it most assuredly will!
A wonderful thinker and writer named Henry David Thoreau walked his own walk,
too, and, in his powerful and inspiring book Walden, he counseled the world about people like
him, and me, and, very likely, you. Thoreau said:
Why should we be in such desperate haste to succeed,
And in such desperate enterprises?
If a man does not keep pace with his companions,
Perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer.
Let all persons step to the music which they hear,
However measured, or far away.
20
Thoreau also said, I would not talk so much about myself, if I knew anyone else as well.
I agree, and this text is more about me than I usually share, but Im afraid (and Im
sorry) that I must stay the course until Ive answered a question you probably have at this
point in our present discussion. Something like, Good for you, Mike. Im so happy for you.
But, in my own life I want to do something positive and potent just as you did. How did you
do it? How can I do it, too?
I think I did it with words!
There was work, and luck, and tenacity, and pushing the envelope, and financial help, and
lots of support, of course. But, the oil that made the machine run, so to speak, was my somewhat
accidental possession of a powerful, expressive, and always-expanding vocabulary!
I still remember a long and inspirational conversation I had with my mother when I was
about 12 years old. We talked about the magic and power of being able to use just the right
word. She told me about Humpty Dumpty who, shortly before his fabled fall, cheekily and
peevishly told Alice that a word could mean anything he wanted it to mean! She told me of
some of the worlds most influential and truly powerful people, the people who did their work
with words; not with guns or money. And, she shared many other things about the fabulous
benefits of owning and using an extensive and excellent vocabulary. She was wonderful, and
she was spot on that rainy tropical day, so long ago. I still love her for it.
I think that interlude with my mother is probably where my conscious love of reading
and vocabulary began.
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Ten years passed quickly. I remember wondering from time to time, in quiet moments
on a boat or in a book, what happened to my wonderfully wide-open and promising future.
I was living a decent life, but one bereft of challenge, anticipation, or deep satisfaction. I
was indubitably, verily, categorically, stuck! I felt lost, confused, and ashamed. What was the
matter with me?
I had entered three professions at which I had done very well, and then abandoned. I
felt like a quitter, an ingrate, a bit of a vagabond. Working in a large power company office
was interesting, fun, and lucrativeI left to join the Marines. Being a Marine was exciting,
dangerous, and adventuresomeI left anyway. Then I learned the civilian trade of painting.
Painting for fifty or sixty hours a week with brush, roller, or spraygun, precariously poised
on an extension ladder, swinging stage, or boatswains chair was fast-paced and athletic, but
after 5 years the challenge was gone, the job had become banal for me, and I was weary and
filled with a vague ennui. I felt I had to change directions yet again.
So, I decided I needed to learn more, and off I went to college. The college placement
exam at that time was, I believe, the SAT (Scholastic Aptitude Test). I squeaked into the third
quartile on the Quantitative section, at the 52nd percentile; a decent score for meespecially
a decade after high school graduation.
My score on the Verbal section, however, was another matter. The counselors were
astounded, and I was encouraged, by my scoring at the 99th percentile. I missed one word;
misanthropea hater of mankind.
21
Polysyllabic Profundity
Proverb
Unremitting fealty to
the metier sans interludes
of hedonistic deflection
renders John a hebetudinous
hobbledehoy.
All work and no play makes
Jack a dull boy.
unremitting: ceaseless; as in,
unremitting fealty to his job
fealty: loyalty or dedication;
as in, unremitting fealty to
his job
metier: job or work; as in,
unremitting fealty to his
metier
interludes: breaks or pauses
hedonistic: pleasure seeking
deflection: deviation
renders: to cause to become
hebetudinous: dullness of
mind; mental lethargy
hobbledehoy: boy or lad
sans: without
sobriquet: an affectionate or
humorous nickname
The rest is history. I didnt get to play college-level sports, or belong to a fraternity,
but I did get a fine education. One academic scholarship followed another. Early on, I
won a Ford Foundation Fellowship, which with the G.I. Bill and some painting income,
put me through a Bachelors, a Masters, and a Doctors degree. From start to finish, my
twelve-cylinder vocabulary was the catalyst and the linchpin of my advancement. I had
a vocabulary which started strong and grew more powerful each year of my life. When
I was young, my mom and dad helped by spending many evenings in friendly dictionary
competitions, and my sister and I caught the bug. We still have it.
With a little help from my friends, a lot of help from my family, and an extraordinary
amount of help from institutions, I moved from painter to professor in 10 years. Not bad
for an average guy armed only with a love of reading and a penchant for word knowledge.
Im sure it helps to be a wunderkind, but you dont have to be. You have to do the necessary
work, and you must really want it (whatever it is), but you dont have to be a paragon
of any kind.
You, too, can build a powerful, expressive, and impressive vocabulary. This personal
learning course will enhance and expedite the process. I have an abiding personal and
professional interest in helping you develop the kind of vocabulary that will help you open
doors, pass tests, and read, write, speak, and listen with alacrity and precision. Oh, and
also, to develop that skill and power in a few weeks; not a few years. I hope that sounds
good to you, because it is good. The Chinese observe that a journey of a thousand miles
begins with a single step. I hope this personal learning course is, for you, that step. It very
well might be just such a step. Youll never know until you try it. Go for it!
Bennettdiction
To speak of mere words is much like speaking of mere dynamite. C. J. Ducass
auf Wiedersehen
ostentatious: a pretentious
display meant to impress
others
clerisy: the intelligentsia; the
educational elite, the literati
bodacious: a fairly new
word combining bold and
audacious; That is fearlessly
daring.
quipped: a brief, witty
remark, delivered offhand
perused: carefully,
thoughtfully, read and
understood
indubitably: undoubtedly
verily: a somewhat archaic,
but still useful word meaning
certainly or assuredly
categorically: without
exception or qualification
22
Matching Challenge
1. unremitting: _____
2. fealty: _____
3. metier: _____
4. hedonistic: _____
5. deflection: _____
6. hebetudinous: _____
7. hobbledehoy: _____
8. perspicuous: _____
9. perspicacious: _____
10. nub: _____
11. vow: _____
12. vim: _____
13. sans souci: _____
14. deja vu: _____
15. wunderkind: _____
16. esurient: _____
17. sobriquet: _____
18. clerisy: _____
19. quip: _____
20. measure: _____
21. tenacity: _____
22. banal: _____
23. perused: _____
24. ennui: _____
25. alacrity: _____
23
salaam,
coruscating,
entities,
auriferous,
et al, et cetera,
et tu Brute, ebb,
lop, vex,
inane,
tabula rasa,
Homo sapiens, sapient,
discerning,
summum bonum,
ratiocinate,
superfluous, cataclysm,
neophyte,
synchronize, salaam,
cogitation,
contemplation,
consideration,
cerebration,
quintessential, infallible,
open sesame,
puissant, ruminative,
apical, apex, vertex,
apogee,
zenith, acme,
pinnacle, acquisitive,
substantive,
synergize,
abbreviated,
precedent, prevenient,
contemplative,
antecedent, skitter,
discourse, hobble,
cardinal,
strenuous, Siam,
touchstone,
probity, retention,
stick-shift, debacle,
moil, chagrin,
recidivate, sublime,
beau geste, impede,
pivotal, cognition,
ambivalence,
ethnocentrism,
compensation,
rationalization,
syncretism, mores,
peripatetic,
empirical, heuristic,
Deweyan,
shalom
6
Reading and the Reader
Lifelong Learning
Salaam. Consider these Mastery Learning inquiries into your learning behaviors:
1) Are you now noticing interesting words when you listen or read?
2) Are you jotting down such words on a notepad or a computer until you can
learn them?
3) Are you keeping a master list of words, which are special to you for some reason,
in your playbook.
4) Are you re-listening to a recorded lesson from time to time?
5) Are you reading and participating in the printed playbook lessons?
6) Are you starting to feel confident in your language proficiency?
7) Have you noticed that your brain has learned to learn? For instance, do you now
know your most effective learning style or styles? Do you employ intentional learning,
productive practice, and effective reinforcement? Are you becoming a Master Learnercan
you feel that particular kind of power about yourself?
Adult reading is thinkingits cognition, contemplation, consideration, and
cerebration. Efficient and effective reading is a celebration, too, because its one of
the golden keys that unlock the doors of knowledge and wisdom. Adult reading is the
quintessential and infallible open sesame for vocabulary development and, of course,
for subject matter confidence and competence. It is not too much to say that puissant
and ruminative reading can be the apex, the vertex, the apogee, the Zenith, the acme, the
pinnacle of learning (all six of those words refer to apicali.e. the highest point).
Ill begin a discussion of efficient and effective adult reading by previewing my main
points. Ill cover what most persons without training hobble, that is impede, themselves with.
Then well unhobble you with some cardinal rapid reading rules youll want to adopt.
The first hobble: millions of persons read slowly and poorly largely because they
dont get ready to read. Most folks take the time to warm-up a little before strenuous
activity; they look at a map or two before a trip; they make an outline before they write;
and, as the King of Siam loved to say, Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. But, do they get ready
to read? Noooo!
And, yet reading is more challenging and demanding than all those other activities
put together! Go figure. So, how can you get ready?
Million Dollar Vocabulary
24
Polysyllabic Profundity
Proverb
All coruscating entities are
not auriferous.
All that glitters is not gold.
Three Latin Invaders
et: and; as in, et al and
others; et ceteraand other
things; et tu Bruteand you,
Brutus
summa: the highest thing: as
in, summit; summary
tabula: tablet; also table;
tabulate; tab
Three Little Words
ebb: to flow back; recede; a
decline; recidivate; The tide
ebbs and flows.
lop: to cut off unnecessary
and superfluous things; Some
dog owners lop off their
puppys tail.
vex: to irritate; annoy; pester;
bother; Dont vex me with
inane questions.
Three Greek Gifts
cat: release: dissolve; loosen
as in, cataclysm; catalogue;
catalyst
neo: new: as in, neophyte;
neonatal
syn: together: as in, synthesis;
synchronize; synergy
Three Purloined Foreignlanguage Expressions
tabula rasa: lit. erased tablet; a
clean slate i.e. mind; The wolf
boys mind was tabula rasa.
Homo sapiens: lit. one
surviving sapient (i.e. wise;
discerning); modern man;
the last surviving discerning
being; The responsibilities of
being a Homo sapiens can take
away from the pleasure.
summum bonum: the greatest
or supreme good; The summum
bonum of life is kindness.
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25
cerebration: thinking;
thought
infallible: incapable of
failing; dependable
open sesame: a seemingly
foolproof means of gaining
access and attaining success
ruminative: meditative;
reflective; contemplative
apical: an adjective meaning
of, pertaining to, located at,
or constituting the highest
place; the apex
apex: vertex; apogee; zenith;
acme; pinnacle; the highest
point; the top
acquisitive: tending to
acquire and retain ideas and
information
substantive: the essence
and substance of something;
essential
synergize: cooperate;
coordinate
prevenient: antecedent;
preceding
hobble: to hamper; restrain;
impede
cardinal: of foremost
importance; pivotal
touchstone: a criterion;
a standard; a test of
genuineness
probity: honesty; integrity;
uprightness
retention: memory;
remembrance; cognition
debacle: collapse; rout; ruin
moil: drudgery; toil
chagrin: a feeling of
embarrassment or humiliation
caused by failure or
disappointment
sublime: noble; grand;
majestic
Letting yourself read quickly, freeing yourself from the moil and chagrin of slow, laborious
reading, is to say the least, sublime and exhilarating. For the most part, you really do, Just
do it! And, in the rapid reading arena, practice does indeed make perfect.
Youre going to be so pleased with what happens. Finding yourself reading quickly,
with solid comprehension, and good long-term retention is absolutely wonderful. I imagine
its a lot like suddenly being able to fly would feel.
Third hobble: Recidivation. To recidivate is to backslideto take two steps forward,
and three steps back. It is probably the worst bad habit of inefficient and ineffective adult
readers because the habit not only wastes your time, it also robs you of your confidence,
and, further, it breaks your chain of thought.
When you unnecessarily stop your reading and thinking, and regress to the rear,
you lose the authors unity, the thread that makes the whole piece make sense.
Regression is occasionally necessary. But if you need to back-up two or three or
four times in every paragraph, then recidivism wont help you, anyway. Obviously, some
other significant something is wrong. Maybe you despise the subject, or the way the author
writes. Perhaps you are tired or depressed. Perhaps the whole business is so far over your
head that you cannot anticipate the language, or actively participate in the knowledge
transfer. Whatever it is, you must discover it, then isolate it, then remediate it.
Unhobble yourself. Do yourself the beau geste, the great favor, of getting ready and
set before you go. When you do go, go swiftly and smoothly, with few regressions and
no daydreaming at all. When you naturally and routinely follow these guidelines, you
can achieve the highest reading goal of allconcentration. Deep, serious, sustained
concentration, which is dependent on, and part of, the previous suggestions.
Concentration is the summum bonum of the reading/learning process. If you can
bring your powerful human mind to bear on the topic, any topic, you can learn it. Your
mind is more powerful than a hundred computers. You can learn anything, when you can
read efficiently. And, you can read efficiently, because your potential is enormous! (And,
you now know the basics of how to do so.)
Lets review how to become an efficient reader:
Briefly preview your reading material.
Close your eyes and get your mind right.
Think about the title and its several uses to you.
Set a distinct and definite purpose for your reading.
Push your mind to get your speed up.
Keep moving ahead; regress only when you truly need to do so.
Concentrate. Keep your magnificent mind on the topic and the task, and think
with and ahead of the print.
Skitter back through the reading, and using the title as a locator for your
thoughts, think about what youve learned, and decide if the writer actually wrote
about what was promised in the title.
26
Bennettdiction
It is not true that we have only one life to live; if we can read, we can live as many lives
and as many kinds of lives, as we wish. S.T. Hayakawa
Shalom
rationalization: justifying
unreasonable behavior with
falsehoods
syncretism: the attempt to
combine or reconcile differing
beliefs; as in, philosophy and
religion; from syn: Greek for
bringing things together and
cretanto unite
mores: the accepted
traditional customs and usages
of a particular social group
peripatetic: of or pertaining
to the teaching methods of
Aristotle, who conducted
discussions while walking
about in the Lyceum of
ancient Athens
empirical: research findings
derived from collected or
experimental data
heuristic: research by
investigation and observation,
rather than by statistical
analysis of collected data
Deweyan: the works of
John Dewey, the preeminent
American educator,
philosopher, and author, who
believed in learning by doing
(as did Edward Robinson, the
Learning to Learn guru)
Lollapalooza
ratiocinate: to reason
methodically and logically:
The Commander is logical
and unemotionalhe can
ratiocinate with the best
of them.
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Jot down new words as you come across them in your readings. Have a
dictionary at hand to look up their meanings. Review your list of new words
regularly to make them a part of your expanded vocabulary.
27
Matching Challenge
1. coruscating: _____
a. of foremost importance; pivotal
2. glisters: _____
b. thinking
3. ebb: _____
c. the essence and substance of something; essential
4. lop: _____
d. tending to acquire and retain ideas and information
5. vex: _____
e. drudgery; toil
6. tabula rasa: _____
f. antecedent: preceding
7. homo sapiens: _____
g. a feeling of embarrassment or humiliation caused by failure
8. summum bonum: _____ or disappointment
9. ratiocinate: _____
h. gleaming, glittering; sparkling
10. cerebration: _____
i. cooperate; coordinate
11. infallible: _____
j. a criterion; a standard; a test of genuineness
12. ruminative: _____
k. collapse: rout; ruin
13. apex: _____
l. to hamper; restrain; impede
14. acquisitive: _____
m. to flow back; recede; a decline; recidivate
15. substantive: _____
n. gold-bearing
16. synergize: _____
o. erased tablet; a clean slate i.e. mind
17. prevenient: _____
p. a gracious gesture
18. hobble: _____
q. incapable of failing; dependable
19. cardinal: _____
r. to irritate; annoy; pester; bother
20. touchstone: _____
s. to reason methodically and logically
21. probity: _____
t. the greatest or supreme good
22. debacle: _____
u. meditative; reflective; contemplative
23. moil: _____
v. vertex: apogee; zenith; acme; pinnacle; the highest point
24. chagrin: _____
w. honesty; integrity; uprightness
25. beau geste: _____
x. modern man
y. to cut off unnecessary and superfluous things
Million Dollar Vocabulary
28
aloha,
neophyte,
serendipity,
ado, ilk,
pejorative,
wen,
homonym,
homophone,
homograph,
ad hoc,
ad hominem,
ad infinitum/ad nauseam,
screed,
diatribe,
contumacious,
nascent, truism,
auditorially,
assuredly,
patently,
perceptions,
formidable,
stultifying,
substantive,
trivialize,
minutiae,
obscure,
discourse,
ameliorating,
consummately,
gaffes,
obstreperous,
cardinal,
handsel,
remunerated,
squander,
efficacious,
fructuous,
foudroyant,
edification,
manumit,
beleaguered,
alas, alack,
bestead,
audition,
teratogenies,
till,
lode,
mettle,
elision,
conundrum,
Godspeed
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7
Listen My Children, and You
Shall Hear
Putting Thoughts into Action and Remembering
What You Learn
Aloha. Its become a truism that effective listening is very important for all of us. We
spend more of our time listening than we do in any other communication activity. Actually, it
is probably more accurate to say that we spend more time hearing, because at least half of what
we are exposed to auditorially is probably unimportant, inaccurate, or useless. The problem is
that most people listen to (hear) the other 50 percenti.e. the half that is important, correct,
and valuablewith the same unfocused mindset that should be kept for the insignificant noise
of small talk, popular lyrics, or unsolicited personal opinions.
Why is that, you may wonder? The answer lies, at least in part, in the sad fact that
listening is not taughtmost assuredly not well-taughtin schools and colleges. It is assumed
that composition, reading, and public address need substantial attention. Amazingly, it seems to
be assumed that everyone is an accomplished listener. How patently absurd. Effective listening
is very difficult for most of us, and listening skills must be learned.
How does one learn to be an effective and selective listener? For starters, to be a good
listener, you must keep your attention focused, even when hearing about subjects that seem
not only difficult, but boring or stultifying as well.
One effective method for staying alert and participatory in such situations is to be selfish.
Yes, selfish. Try to discover something that will work to your advantage, because some positive
benefit to you, personally or professionally, can be derived from almost any substantive listening
situation. Dont trivialize the importance of listening for unusual vocabulary. Buried in the
minutiae of abstruse topics can be a goldmine of useful words and thoughts.
Accurate listening can be difficult or impossible when the listener has a limited vocabulary.
Youre working on ameliorating that problem now. You have that base covered, so to speak.
Not everyone does, of course.
As an important side-bar, we sometimes learn better, and remember longer, from
catching the mistakes of others. Its the consummately-human competition thing, I guess.
Whatever it is, it works, so instead of feeling annoyed, or superior, use anothers verbal gaffes
to help you learn.
A common and debilitating listening mistake is to judge the book by its cover. Speakers
may be physically attractive, well-dressed, and pleasantly spoken. Or, they may be startlingly
unattractive, badly-dressed, and speak in a monotonous drone. The former is easier to listen
29
Polysyllabic Profundity
Proverb:
Neophytes serendipity
Beginners luck
Three Latin Invaders
in: not: as in, indisposed;
indispensable
inter: between: as in,
intercultural; interchange
intra and intro: within: as
in, intravenous; intracoastal;
introverted
Three Little Words
ado: busy activity; fuss;
excitement; Shakespeare
wrote a charming play called,
Much Ado About Nothing.
ilk: class; kind; type (a
pejorative term); Al Capone,
and his ilk, spent a great deal
of time in Miami.
wen: a skin growth; a bump;
Have the wen looked at.
Three Greek Gifts
nym: name: as in, homonym;
synonym; antonym
phon: sound: as in,
homophone; microphone
graph: write: as in,
homograph; autograph
Lollapalooza
contumacious: obstinately
disobedient or rebellious;
insubordinate; Many
teenagers seem to go out of
their way to be stubborn and
contumacious.
to, of course; the latter less so. But are these things the message? Of course not!
The characteristics of the speaker, whether pleasing or unpleasing, shouldnt interfere
with listening. If you make up your mind to be a good listener, you can overcome the distractions
created by an off-putting speaker as successfully, and in the same way, as you overcome
distractions caused by the environment around you. Just turn a blind eye and a deaf ear
to them, and keep on keeping on.
Know that the cardinal idea of listening and reading instruction is that the adult
listenerand the adult readermust assume at least 51 percent of the responsibility for the
transfer of knowledge and information from one human mind to another. Believe that the
speakers and the writers have done their very best, and the rest is up to you. The buck stops
with you! This creates a focused mind.
As always, if you dont have a specific purpose, your mind will wander almost immediately
after the speaker begins. Decide on your purpose for hearing the talk, and remind and re-remind
yourself from time to time just why you are there, and what you want from the speaker.
Good listening is challenging, but so is almost everything of real value, such as maintaining
a classic car, or a good relationship. Good athletic performance doesnt come easily, and neither
do good grades in school. Looking your best every day becomes a chore, and so is looking
for a job. So why do we do these things? Because the reward is great. So it is with effective
listening. Giving yourself the power of effective listening will be a wonderful little handsel, or
gift, you give yourself, and you will be well remuneratedin this vocabulary personal learning
course, and in each and every critical listening situation you find yourself in.
Push yourself to be an active participant in a listening environment. It helps to push yourself
to pay close attention, stay in the room (mentally), and capitalize on your listening speed.
Listening speed is thought speed, and it averages about 500 words per minute (WPM)
for most people, most of the time (there are times though, when we are frightened or excited,
for instance, when thought speed may go up as high as 5,000 WPM). In contrast, speaking
speed averages only about 150 WPM.
What this means is that at least 40 seconds of every minuteover two-thirdsis available
for some mental activity other than listening. The important consideration will be what you
should do with the bonus time provided by your listening speed. You can squander it in
daydreaming or flights of fancy; or you can put it to very good use by helping yourself to excel by
participating with the speakerthat is, by thinking with, and ahead of, the speakers words.
30
1. Take a vocabulary course such as this one. (True, but not a shocking or foudroyant
suggestion, I guess.)
2. Read widely and often, and take notice of new and important words.
3. Listen, and note the pronunciation and usage of words.
4. Read and study a good vocabulary book, or a good book with a broad word base.
5. Learn some important English source wordsespecially Latin and Greek.
6. Use them, or lose them. Mastery learning is not possible without using the
knowledge exposed to you.
stultifying: to cause to
appear stupid or ridiculous
ameliorate: to make better;
to improve
substantive: the essence of
something
debilitate: to make feeble,
enervate
discourse: a formal
discussion
screed: a diatribe; long
monotonous language
audition: the act or sense of
hearing
acquiesce: to comply
without protest
nascent: in the process of
emerging
obstreperous: noisily
defiant; boisterous; unruly
Bennettdiction
fructuous: fruitful;
productive
Godspeed
foudroyant: dazzling;
stunning
manumit: liberate; release;
emancipate
beleaguered: besieged;
beset; harassed
bestead: to be of service to;
avail; aid
teratogenies: little monsters
conundrum: a problem
admitting of no satisfactory
solution
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31
32
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Matching Challenge
1. ado: _____
a. the act or sense of hearing
2. ilk: _____
b. obstinately disobedient or rebellious; insubordinate
3. wen: _____
c. besieged; beset; harassed
4. ad hoc: _____
d. to infinity
5. ad hominem: _____
e. a diatribe; a bitter, abusive, usually long speech or paper
6. ad infinitum: _____
f. a gift to express good wishes at the beginning of an
7. contumacious: _____ enterprise or new year
8. stultifying: _____
g. to comply without protest
9. ameliorate: _____
h. a formal discussion
10. substantive: _____
i. dazzling; stunning
11. foudroyant: _____
j. fruitful; productive
12. debilitate: _____
k. a problem admitting of no satisfactory solution
13. screed: _____
l. liberate; release; emancipate
14. audition: _____
m. with respect to this (particular thing)
15. acquiesce: _____
n. to cause to appear stupid or ridiculous
16. obstreperous: _____
o. class; kind; type
17. handsel: _____
p. to be of service to; avail; aid
18. fructuous: _____
q. to the man, meaning appealing to ones personal
19. discourse: _____ interests or emotions, rather than to reason or logic
20. manumit: _____
r. enlightenment
21. beleaguered: _____
s. busy activity; fuss; excitement
22. bestead: _____
t. little monsters
23. teratogenies: _____
u. noisy, obnoxious
24. conundrum: _____
v. to make feeble; enervate
25. edification: _____
w. to make better; to improve
x. the essence of something
y. a skin growth; a bump
33
hail,
scintillate,
asteroid, minim, penitent,
punitive,
suppress,
veracious,
verisimilitude,
-ana, tor,
qua,
peripatetic, minutiae,
moue,
roue,
grimace,
Mrs. Malaprop,
allegory,
progeny,
reprehend, oracular,
derangement,
epitaphs,
vernacular,
epithets,
Freudian,
caustically,
aspiring,
hustings,
thespian,
masticate,
besmirch,
avid,
bask,
cloy, daft,
ecru,
flux,
grig, hasp,
icon,
jape,
knur, lank,
moot,
node,
ogle,
pate,
quip,
rasp,
seep,
tarn,
vale, waif,
Xeno,
yean,
zeal,
transpose,
ciao
8
Word Play
Expanded Consciousness of Wit, Humor,
and Satire
Hail. Few things can subject a person to ridicule more than accidentally butchering the
language. So much so, that accidental puns and verbal faux pas have been known to destroy all
vestiges of dignity a person may have had. For instance, Bostons Mayor Menino saying of the
parking-space problem in the city, Its like an Alcatraz around my neck; or Chicagos Mayor
Daley, The police are not here to create disorder. They are here to preserve disorder; and
D. C.s Mayor Barry, The contagious people of Washington have stood firm against diversity
during this long period of increment weather. That about says it all, doesnt it?
A related language confusion is the spoonerism, an accidental interchange of initial
sounds made famous by an Oxford don (thats a professor), Dr. W. A. Spooner. Blushing
crow for crushing blow, and a well-boiled icicle for a well-oiled bicycle are examples
of spoonerisms, as are longer and more complex complete sentences. Two wonderful instances
are his admonishment of a lazy student; Youve hissed all your mystery lectures and tasted
two whole wormshe meant to say, Youve missed all your history lectures and wasted two
whole terms; and his request to his butler, Hush my brat please; its roaring with pain.
Give up? Brush my hat, please; its pouring with rain.
Puns of a sexy or sexual nature, which are often dubbed Freudian slips, can create much
merriment at the speakers expense. Some Freudian slips are not sexual, but they certainly
are Freudian, in that they are very revealing of the speakers secret thoughts. For instance,
Hillary Clintons now famous, Im not going to have some reporters pawing through our
papers. We are the president!
The deliberate pun is a form of word-play and, as such, is meant to elicit the mockdisapproval of groans and moues. An example is the transposing, by us stout persons, of the United
Negro College Fund in quipping, The waist is a terrible thing to mind. One of the most famous
and amusing language butchers is one Mrs. Malaprop, a literary character in Richard Sheridans
play, The Rivals. Her colorful phrasing was amusingly mal- or in- appropriate.
For instance, Mrs. Malaprop once considered another person, as head-strong as an
allegory (parable) on the banks of the Nile (kind of a double malapropism in that there are no
alligators in the Nile, only crocodiles). She considered another person as a progeny (instead
of prodigy) of learning. One of the longer malapropisms is, If I reprehend anything in this
world it is the use of my oracular tongue and a nice derangement of epitaphs. She meant to
say, If I comprehend anything in this world it is the use of my vernacular tongue and a nice
arrangement of epithets. Sheridans wit and wordsmithery is certainly show-cased by the
verbal gaffes of his character, Mrs. Malaprop.
Million Dollar Vocabulary
34
Polysyllabic Profundity
Proverb
Scintillate, scintillate,
asteroid minim.
Twinkle, twinkle, little star.
Three Latin Invaders
pen or pun: to pay or
compensate: as in, penitent;
penalty; punitive
sub or sup: below: as in,
submarine; suppress
ver: truth: as in, verdict;
veracious; verisimilitude
Three Little Words
-ana: a collection of materials
that reflect a person or place;
Rockwells Americana.
tar: a high rock; a pile of rocks;
Lars has climbed the tars.
qua: in the capacity of: as in,
her lawyer qua accountant
Three Greek Gifts
peri: around: as in,
peripatetic; perimeter;
periscope
scop: see or watch: as in,
periscope; microscopic;
(equivalent of Latin spec: as in,
spectator)
micro: small: as in,
microscope; microbe; micromanagement; (equivalent of
Latin min: as in minute or
minute; minimum; minutiae)
Three Purloined Foreignlanguage Expressions
vini; vidi; vici; He came, he
saw, he conquered (said of
Caesar).
bon vivant (bone veevan): a
person who enjoys good food,
drink, and luxury; La Mar is a
bon vivant wannabe.
fait accompli (fe-ta-konplee): an accomplished fact;
Libbys painting is now a fait
accompli.
Here are three deliberate (anonymous) puns I find smart and amusing:
Did you hear about the Buddhist who refused his dentists Xylocaine during root canal
work? He wanted to transcend dental medication.
Two boll weevils grew up in South Carolina. One went to California and became very
successful. The other stayed in the cotton fields and never amounted to much. The second
one, naturally, became known as the lesser of two weevils.
A doctor made it his regular habit to stop off at a bar for a hazelnut daiquiri on his way
home. The bartender knew of his custom, and would always have the drink waiting at precisely
5:03 p.m. One afternoon, as the end of the work day approached, the bartender was dismayed
to find that he was out of hazelnut extract. Thinking quickly, he threw together a daiquiri with
hickory nut extract and placed it on the bar. The doctor came in at his regular time, took one
sip of the drink, and exclaimed, This isnt a hazelnut daiquiri! No, Im sorry, replied the
bartender, its a hickory daiquiri, doc.
There is another category of deliberate word confusion which is not the product of a
speakers or writers ignorance but, rather, a mean-spirited (although sometimes caustically
amusing) analysis of the audiences ignorance of word meanings and uses. Heres how one
aspiring politician did it:
During my high school days in Florida, there was a very close gubernatorial race between
Claude Pepper, who was supported primarily by the small town and rural electorate, and
George Smathers, a strikingly handsome and witty candidate, with a strong base in the big
cities of Miami, Jacksonville, Orlando, and Tampa.
Pepper was generally considered to be the more sincere and more qualified of the two
old-Florida-family hopefuls, and Pepper was going to wina narrow margin was predicted,
but he would win.
So, the clever Smathers went out to the hustings to campaign by stump speeches and
church suppersto meet the people where they lived, and to capitalize on their naivete and
their lack of vocabulary sophistication. One of his most effective statements went something
like this: It grieves me to report to you some little-known facts about my opponent in this
election which might possibly bring dishonor to our proud state, but I must share the truth.
My friends, Mr. Pepper has admitted that his very own sister is a practicing thespian in wicked
New York City. She and her kind are well-known to gather in restaurants and masticate in
plain sight of good people. If I am elected to this exalted post, I promise never to besmirch
the office of Governor of the great state of Florida.
Smathers won big. I guess he had the last word, so to speak.
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35
Lollapalooza
hasp: a metal fastener or lock; Dave broke the hasp with a sledge hammer.
naivete: unawareness;
ignorance
Xeno: a Greek prefix indicating strange, foreign, or different as in xenophobe, one who fears and
hates strangers, or xenophile, one who loves or is attracted to them.
yean: to give birth; Trixie yeaned againtwo little lambs.
Bennettdiction
In my belief, you cannot deal with the most serious things in the world
unless you also understand the most amusing. Winston Churchill
Ciao
36
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Matching Challenge
1. scintillate: _____
2. -ana: _____
3. tarn: _____
4. qua: _____
5. vini; vidi; vici; _____
6. bon vivante: _____
7. fait accompli: _____
8. moue: _____
9. roue: _____
10. vestiges: _____
11. engender: _____
12. neophyte: _____
13. increment: _____
14. thespian: _____
15. masticate: _____
16. besmirch: _____
17. cloy: _____
18. espy: _____
19. grig: _____
20. jape: _____
21. mien: _____
22. pate: _____
23. tarn: _____
24. waif: _____
25. yean: _____
37
namaste,
reconnaissance,
antedate,
saltation,
anterior, antebellum,
impetuous,
propitious,
apocryphal,
apogee, affaire de coeur,
bibliophile,
philharmonic,
par excellence,
Gesundheit,
tour de force, epitome,
penultimate, incipient,
buckaroo,
dispelling, angst,
odious,
noisome, repugnant,
disquietude,
circumspect,
erudite,
prudent,
cognizant,
transmissive,
demographic,
situational, attribute,
paramount,
ascertain,
rationale,
unequivocally,
vacillation,
cogitate,
deliberate,
precisely,
trenchant,
mundane, font,
dictum, scope,
incomparable,
Gettysburg Address,
qua, concise,
gaffes,
colloquial,
discourse, clich,
analogy,
metaphor,
simile, idiom,
euphemism,
non sequitur,
trite, ascribing,
sayonara
9
Sail on the Seven Cs
Getting Your Message Through to Others
Namaste. Lets concern ourselves with the fine arts of articulate, professional-level,
writing and speaking.
In preparation, or, rather, the lack of it, lies the principal source of fear and
loathing many persons suffer when its time to write. And, brother, do most people dodge
writing, and run full-tilt from public speaking. For most of us, following the wisdom of
the Boy Scout motto, Be prepared, is the most propitious method of dispelling fear of
failurewhich is the source of our communication angst.
Writing and speaking need not be the odious, noisome, repugnant tasks they often
seem to be. The key to liberation from such disquietude, and to excellence of speaking
and writing performance, is preparationcircumspect, erudite, prudent preparation. Id
like now to teach you how to prepare.
Before you write a word of your speech or paper, honor these prerequisites:
Prerequisite 1. Decide who the piece is being written fori.e. analyze your intended
audience. Carefully determining, before you begin, the demographic and situational
attributes of the person or persons reading or hearing your words is of paramount
importance.
Prerequisite 2. Why are you taking pen in hand? Ascertain the true reason for
your effortsyour personal and professional rationale, or rationales, need to be carefully
and unequivocally known to you. Avoid any and all vacillation or self-deceptionits just
too important to be totally and completely aware of why youre writing.
Prerequisite 3. Cogitate, investigate, deliberate as to your true intentions. What
exactly, do you want from your audience? Do you want to be forgiven, chosen, hired,
selected, learned from, inspired by, heard out? Knowing precisely what you want to achieve,
what you want from your readers or listeners, positively stimulates and influences your
conscious thinking, and your sub-conscious sense of appropriateness. What do you want
to accomplish with your work?
Prerequisite 4. First aspect: How do you present yourself? How do you wish to
sound. What will be your voice and tone; the relative difficulty-level of the words you
choose; your specificity and trenchancy? And, of course there are the more mundane
considerations of length, font, paper, and so on.
Second aspect: Do you need to do a little research, make a few calls, gather some
material, interview an expert, find some reference materials? Make sure you not only
Million Dollar Vocabulary
38
Polysyllabic Profundity
Proverb
Reconnaissance antedates
saltation.
Look before you leap.
Three Latin Invaders
ante: before: as in, anterior;
antebellum; antedate
pet or pit: to go, to seek,
to strive: as in, compete;
impetuous; propitious
ben or bon: good: as in,
benefit; benevolent; bonus
Three Little Words
don: to put or dress in; a
Spanish gentleman; an Oxford
or Cambridge fellow; The
judge donned his robes.
bob: a quick movement; a
fishing float; a short haircut
on a woman or child; to
curtsey or bow; a shilling; and
others; Ali could really bob
and weave.
joe: coffee; an American
soldier; guy; fellow; Bill is a
regular joe, isnt he?
Three Greek Gifts
apo: away: as in, apostle;
apocryphal; apogee
card or cord or cour: heart:
as in, cardiac; cordial; affaire
de coeur
phil: love: as in, philosophy;
bibliophile; philharmonic
Three Purloined Foreignlanguage Expressions
par excellence: excellent
beyond comparison; epitome;
The steak was par excellence
Gesundheit: means: good
health; When a person
sneezes, its good luck for
them if you say, Gesundheit!
tour de force: a remarkable
achievement; a feat; Our
governors election was a tour
de force.
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39
Lolapalooza
penultimate: next to last
(like this chapter)
angst: anxiety; A call from the
boss filled me up with angst.
odious: abhorrent or
offensive; Cleaning up after
Spot is an odious task, isnt it?
noisome: disgusting or
dangerous; Spot is noisome.
repugnant: repulsive or
contradictory; Spot is repugnant.
disquietude: uneasiness; My
boss fills me with disquietude.
4) avoid that for very in sentences such as, He was not that talented.
propitious: favorable or
auspicious; It is a propitious
time to build a power vocabulary.
5) avoid aint for is not and dont got for dont haveyes, there are
dictionary entries for them, but they make you sound unlettered and careless.
circumspect: heedful
of circumstances or
consequences; The shy old
fox was most circumspect.
erudite: learned and wise;
Professor Umlaut is erudite.
prudent: careful in regard to
ones own interests; George
Bush was prudent.
cognizant: fully informed;
conscious; Successful counterintelligence agents are always
cognizant of enemy activities.
Bennettdictions
The pen is mightier than the sword, Bulwer Lytton
Speech is a mirror of the soul: as a person speaks, so is that person. Tibullus
If you would be pungent, be brief; it is with words as with sunbeams. The more
they are condensed, the deeper they burn. Southey
Sayonara
metaphor: a comparison by
describing one thing by ascribing
characteristics of another; e.g.
That guys a horse!
simile: a comparison using
like or as; e.g. He fights
like a tiger.
euphemism: an inoffensive
term substituted for a harsher
one; e.g. funeral home
40
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Matching Challenge
1. reconnaissance: _____
a. careful in regard to ones own interests; provident
2. antedate: _____
b. to put or dress in
3. saltation: _____
c. good health to you
4. don: _____
d. leaping or jumping
5. bob: _____
e. disgusting or dangerous
6. joe: _____
f. an authoritative pronouncement
7. par excellence: _____
g. abhorrent or offensive
8. Gesundheit: _____
h. force and vigor
9. Tour de force: _____
i. excellent beyond comparison; epitome
10. penultimate: _____
j. to precede in time
11. angst: _____
k. an exploratory military or engineering survey
12. odious: _____
l. human population characteristics, such as average age
13. noisome: _____
m. learned and wise
14. disquietude: _____
n. a quick movement; a fishing float
15. propitious: _____
o. coffee; an American soldier; guy; fellow
16. circumspect: _____
p. a remarkable achievement; a feat
17. erudite: _____
q. an inoffensive term substituted for a harsher one
18. prudent: _____
r. uneasiness
19. cognizant: _____
s. anxiety
20. demographic: _____
t. next to last
21. trenchant: _____
u. favorable or auspicious
22. dictum: _____
v. heedful of circumstances or consequences
23. idiom: _____
w. a statement to which no response seems appropriate
24. euphemism: _____
x. fully informed; conscious
25. non sequitur: _____
y. an accepted phrase that is contrary to the usual
language pattern
41
entities, vitreous,
forbear, petrious,
antebellum,
bellicose, carnal, doctrine,
den, squalid,
fen, tarn, wry, pen,
paradox, dogma,
pandemic, amorphous,
endomorph, ectomorph,
mesomorph, pandemic,
piece de resistance,
magnum opus,
in absentia,
sesquipedalian, squib,
incipient, scintillate,
percolate, ululate,
persnickety,
quintessential,
exponential, mellifluous,
stolid, stodgy,
prattle,
Magna Carta,
Gettysburg Address,
eke, bog, mired,
muck, hovel,
penicillin, orthodox,
pedestrian,
raconteur, pedant,
ostentatious,
sycophant, savant,
martinet,
caparison, excoriate,
abrade, censure,
vitiate, transmogrify,
vituperate, rail,
particolored, nonpareil,
salacious, erubescent,
florid, nonplused,
encomium, calumny,
approbation, fulmination,
panegyric, vivacious,
abrogate, vouchsafe,
deign, deracinate,
proselytize, elucidate,
Machiavellian,
machinations,
temerarious,
quotidian, sequacious,
fawning,
gongoristic, esculent
goodbye
10
I Love Words
Gaining Respect and Admirationfrom
Self and Others
I love words that sparkle and shine and scintillate
I love words that agitate and percolate and ululate
I love words that illustrate and adumbrate and pontificate
I love bellowing, bawdy, bodacious words
I love slimy, slippery, salacious words
I love prim, pristine, persnickety words
I love words that are clear and crisp and quintessential
I love words that are tiny, and those exponential
I love words that are mellow, mellifluous, and musical
I love words that are stolid, or stodgy, or whimsical
I love words that prattle or battle, that teach and that preach
I love words that hold you, and scold you, and mold you, and told you
We are our words, and our words are us
I love words.
It has been said that a picture is worth a thousand words, and maybe it can be. But,
the Lords Prayer, the Magna Carta, and the Gettysburg Address all together are less than a
thousand words. I dont believe a thousand pictures could replicate or replace the power and
influence of those words; do you?
I wish to share with you now a wonderful story. The story employs a half-dozen words
of interest to us here, and it also provides a powerful and inspiring thought for those of us
who have sought, and for those of you who are seeking, the key to success and fulfillment in
our lives.
42
Polysyllabic Profundity
Proverb
Entities abiding in vitreous
domiciles must forbear
catapulting petrious
projectiles.
Fleming had saved. I want to repay you, said the nobleman. You saved my sons life.
No, I cant accept payment for what I did, the Scottish farmer replied, waving off the
offer. At that moment, the farmers own son came to the door of the family hovel.
Is that your son? the nobleman asked. Yes, the farmer replied proudly.
Ill make you a deal. Let me take him and give him a good education. If the lad is
anything like his father, hell grow to a man you can be proud of.
And that he did. In time, Farmer Flemings son graduated from St. Marys Hospital
Medical School in London, and went on to become known throughout the world as the noted
Sir Alexander Fleming, the discoverer of penicillin.
Years afterward, the noblemans son was stricken with pneumonia. What saved
him? Penicillin.
The name of the nobleman? Lord Randolph Churchill. His sons name?
Sir Winston Churchill.
Love over 30
Right now, I wish to isolate for you 30 of the 30,000 words I love. These 30 words
are a small but important segment of the vocabulary which helped me to open the door of
opportunity, and to make the most of my life. I call these karate words, because you dont
need to use them very often, but, when you do, theyre worth their weight in gold.
My first five words are nimble nouns:
raconteur: story teller; especially anecdotes
pedant: a doctrinaire; undue attention to book learning; ostentatiously scholarly
sycophant: a servile self-seeker; a toady; an apple polisher
savant: a learned scholar; a wise man
martinet: a rigid military disciplinarian
As in, Philip the pedant and Sam the savant could not agree on the intended message of
a story told by a traveling raconteur who depicted Quixote as a no-brain martinet and Panza
as a sniveling sycophant.
The next five words are vital verbs:
caparison: to outfit with richly ornamented clothes or finery
excoriate: to tear off the skin; abradealso, to answer strongly; upbraid
vitiate: to spoil something; to corrupt something or someone; debase; pervert;
to invalidate
transmogrify: to change into a different shape or form, especially one that is fantastic
or bizarre
vituperate: to rail against severely or abusively; berate; revile
As in, The brightly caparisoned raconteur was unanimously excoriated by the pedants
www.LearningStrategies.com
43
present for vitiating the respected old allegory with vituperative suggestions that Sancho could
transmogrify himself into a hideous gargoyle anytime he wished.
Here are five artful adjectives:
particolored: having different parts or sections colored differently; pied (as in, Pied
Piper of Hamlin)
nonpareil: without rival; matchless; peerless; unequaled
salacious: stimulating to the sexual imagination; lusty; lecherous; bawdy
erubescent: with red skin; flushed; florid
nonplused: a state of perplexity or bafflement prohibiting action, speech, or thought
As in, The parents of the teenager were totally nonplused by the obvious fact that their
daughters considered the aging actor a sex symbol nonpareil when he flashed a salacious smile
from his erubescent and particolored face.
Here are five more noble nouns:
encomium: a formal expression of lofty praise; tribute; eulogy
calumny: a false statement; maliciously or knowingly made to harm someone
approbation: praise; commendation; official approval
fulmination: a thunderous denunciation or censure
panegyric: a public compliment; elaborate praise or laudation
For instance, The fulmination of the young professor planned by the vituperative
old Dean became instead an encomium, indeed a panegyric filled with approbation when
he learned that a small group of jealous plotters had engaged in base calumny against their
younger colleague.
And, five vivacious verbs:
abrogate: to abolish or annul
vouchsafe: to condescend to grant or bestow; to deign
deracinate: to uproot; displace; dislocate
proselytize: to make, or attempt to make, converts
elucidate: to make clear or plain
As in, The Dean made no effort to proselytize the old schemers, but he publicly elucidated his
plan to abrogate their tenure, and deracinate them from their posh offices, though he did vouchsafe
to forgive their Machiavellian machinations if they would publicly apologize.
And, just for fun and further growth, these five awesome adjectives:
temerarious: reckless, daring; rash
quotidian: commonplace; everyday occurrence
44
Final words...
There you have ita thousand words to help you make a million dollars. Figuratively,
and perhaps, literally. Youre already much richer than you were before we connected; ncestce pas?
I wish for you a vital life of personal growth and rich fulfillment. I trust my work will
have been a part of them both. I urge you to listen to these recordings at least twice. I beseech
you to make full use of the mastery learning your playbook makes possible. I advise you to
keep your eyes on the prize that a powerful vocabulary creates. I thank you for your trust in
me and in Learning Strategies Corporation. And, I hope you make a million dollars!
Bennettdiction
I am a bear of very little brain, and long words bother me. A. A. Milne, Winnie the Pooh
Goodbye
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45
Matching Challenge
1. vitreous: _____
a. a short humorous writing
2. petrious: _____
b. a rigid military disciplinarian
3. den: _____
c. to tear off the skin; abradealso, to answer strongly
4. fen: _____
d. a very long word
5. pen: _____
e. a small miserable dwelling
6. piece de resistance: _____
f. a servile self-seeker; a toady; an apple polisher
7. magnum opus: _____
g. story teller; especially anecdotes
8. in absentia: _____
h. to make a living with great effort and strain
9. sesquipedalian: _____
i. having different parts or sections colored differently, pied
10. squib: _____
j. to write; writer; a style of writing, a writing implement
11. eke: _____
k. the principal work of a person or group
12. muck: _____
l. rock-like
13. hovel: _____
m. to outfit with richly ornamented clothes or finery
14. raconteur: _____
n. glass
15. pedant: _____
o. without rival; matchless; peerless; unequaled
16. sycophant: _____
p. to rail against severely or abusively; berate; revile
17. savant: _____
q. a moist, sticky mixture of mud and filth
18. martinet: _____
r. a writers greatest work
19. caparison: _____
s. a bog; swamp
20. excoriate: _____
t. a doctrinaire; undue attention to book learning;
21. vitiate: _____ ostentatiously scholarly
22. ransmogrify: _____
u. to change into a different shape or form, especially one
23. vituperate: _____ that is fantastic or bizarre
24. particolored: _____
v. lair; cave; squalid abode; a room to relax or study in
25. nonpareil: _____
w. a learned scholar; a wise man
x. in absence; although not present
y. to spoil something; to corrupt something or someone;
debase; pervert; to invalidate
Million Dollar Vocabulary
46
Answers to Matching
Challenges
Chapter 1: 1.f 2. d 3.c 4.t 5.a 6.v 7.i 8.s 9.g 10.l 11.h 12.q 13.r 14.b 15.u 16.j
17.x 18.w 19.n 20.e 21.y 22.p 23.o 24.k 25.m
Chapter 2: 1.m 2.w 3.j 4.f 5.h 6.n 7.t 8.g 9.a 10.e 11.s 12.p 13.b 14.u 15.y
16.k 17.o 18.c 19.x 20.r 21.v 22.d 23.i 24.l 25.q
Chapter 3: 1.t 2.e 3.h 4.f 5.g 6.l 7.b 8.q 9.v 10.y 11.a 12.r 13.c 14.j 15.d 16.x
17.n 18.u 19.w 20.m 21.i 22.o 23.k 24.p 25.s
Chapter 4: 1.l 2.j 3.n 4.c 5.a 6.u 7.g 8.d 9.m 10.q 11.e 12.r 13.f 14.x 15.t 16.i
17.w 18.y 19.v 20.b 21.p 22.s 23.o 24.h 25.k
Chapter 5 1.o 2.l 3.i 4.k 5.d 6.g 7.m 8.q 9.b 10.t 11.v 12.w 13.c 14.j 15.u 16.y
17.a 18.e 19.f 20.x 21.p 22.r 23.s 24.n 25.h
Chapter 6: 1.n 2.h 3.m 4.y 5.r 6.o 7.x 8.t 9.s 10.b 11.q 12.u 13.v 14.d 15.c
16.i 17.f 18.l 19.a 20.j 21.w 22.k 23.e 24.g 25.p
Chapter 7: 1.s 2.o 3.y 4.m 5.q 6.d 7.b 8.n 9.w 10.x 11.i 12.v 13.e 14.a 15.g
16.u 17.f 18.j 19.h 20.l 21.c 22.p 23.t 24.k 25.r
Chapter 8: 1.k 2.p 3.j 4.r 5.o 6.x 7.l 8.v 9.m 10.u 11.s 12.a 13.b 14.c 15.w
16.f 17.i 18.t 19.y 20.h 21.g 22.d 23.e 24.q 25.n
Chapter 9: 1.k 2.j 3.d 4.b 5.n 6.o 7.i 8.c 9.p 10.t 11.s 12.g 13.e 14.r 15.u 16.v
17.m 18.a 19.x 20.l 21.h 22.f 23.y 24.q 25.w
Chapter 10: 1.n 2.l 3.v 4.s 5.j 6.k 7.r 8.x 9.d 10.a 11.h 12.q 13.e 14.g 15.t
16.f 17.w 18.b 19.m 20.c 21.y 22.u 23.p 24.i 25.o
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47
Answers to Crossword
Puzzles
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
48
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
49
Glossary
abbreviate
To make shorter by removing
or leaving out parts.
abeyance (uh BAY unts)
1. Temporarily set aside;
suspended.
2. Law. A condition of
undetermined ownership, as of
an estate that has not yet been
assigned.
abiding
Lasting for a long time;
enduring.
abjure (ab JOOR)
To reject or recant solemnly.
abrade
1. To make weary through
constant irritation.
2. To wear down or rub away
by friction; erode.
abrogate
To abolish, do away with, or
annul, especially by authority.
abscond (ab SKOND)
To leave quickly and secretly
and hide oneself, often to
avoid arrest or prosecution.
abstruse (ab STROOS)
Difficult to understand or
comprehend.
acme (AK mee)
The highest point; perfection.
acquisitive (ak KWIZ uh tive)
1. Tending to acquire and
retain ideas or information.
2. Characterized by a strong
desire to gain and possess.
acrid (AK rid)
1. Bitter in language or tone;
rancorous.
2. Unpleasantly sharp,
pungent, or bitter to the taste
or smell.
ad hoc (ADD HOK)
Latin. 1. For the specific purpose,
50
Angles
Members of a Germanic tribe
that conquered England in the
5th century A.D.
angst (ank st/uh)
A feeling of dread, anxiety,
apprehension, or insecurity.
animus (AN uh muss)
A feeling of animosity, ill will,
or hatred.
antebellum (ant ih BELL um)
Belonging to the period before
a war, especially the U.S. Civil
War.
antecedent
1. Prior in time or order.
2. Going before; preceding.
3. Antecedents. Ones
ancestors.
4. Grammar. The word,
phrase, or clause to which a
pronoun refers.
5. Logic. The conditional
member of a hypothetical
proposition.
antedate
1. To be of an earlier date
than; precede in time.
2. To assign to a date earlier
than that of the actual
execution.
anthropocentric
1. Considering human beings
as the most significant entity of
the universe.
2. Interpreting or regarding
the world in terms of human
values and experiences.
antipathy (an TIP uh thee)
A strong feeling of aversion
or repugnance; opposition in
feeling; distaste; enmity.
apex
The highest point; the vertex;
the summit; the uppermost
point.
apical (AP ih kull)
Of, relating to, or situated at
an apex.
apocryphal
(uh POCK ruh ful)
Spurious; of questionable
authorship or authenticity;
erroneous; fictitious.
apogee (AP uh jee)
The point in the orbit of the
moon or of an artificial satellite
most distant from the center
of the earth.
approbation
1. Official approval.
2. An expression of warm
approval; praise.
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auscultation
(aw skul TAY shun)
1. The act of listening.
2. Medicine. The act of
listening for sounds made
by internal organs, as the
heart and lungs, to aid in the
diagnosis of certain disorders.
avid
1. Marked by keen interest and
enthusiasm.
2. Having an ardent desire or
limitless craving.
3. To cause to sink in or as if
in a bog.
4. To be hindered and slowed;
to bog down.
bonjour (bahn ZHOOR)
French. Good day; hello.
buckaroo
A cowboy.
buffoon
1. A ludicrous or bumbling
person; a fool.
2. A clown; a jester.
51
2. A factor to be considered
in forming a judgment or
decision.
consigned (kun SINED)
1. To turn over permanently
to anothers charge; commit
irrevocably.
2. To give over to the care of
another; entrust.
consummate
1. Complete or perfect in
every respect.
2. Supremely accomplished or
skilled.
contemplation
(kon tem PLAY shun)
Thoughtful observation or
meditation.
contemplative
(kon TEM play tiv)
Disposed to or characteristic
of thoughtful observation.
contiguous (kun TIG yoo uhs)
1. Sharing an edge or
boundary; touching.
2. Neighboring; adjacent.
3. Connected in time;
uninterrupted.
contumacious
(kon too MAY shus)
Obstinately disobedient or
rebellious; insubordinate.
conundrum (kuh NUN drum)
1. A riddle in which a fanciful
question is answered by a pun.
2. A paradoxical, insoluble, or
difficult problem; a dilemma.
coquette (koh KET)
A woman who makes teasing
sexual or romantic overtures;
a flirt.
correlative (kuh REL uh tiv)
Related; corresponding.
coruscate (KOR us kate)
To give forth flashes of light;
sparkle and glitter; scintillate.
coy
1. Affectedly and usually
flirtatiously shy or modest.
2. Annoyingly unwilling to
make a commitment.
cronies
Long-time close friends or
companions.
cumbersome
1. Troublesome or onerous.
2. Difficult to handle because
of weight or bulk.
cutaneous (kyoo TAY nee us)
Of, relating to, or affecting
the skin.
D
daft
1. Mad; crazy.
2. Foolish; stupid.
de jure (dee JOOR ee)
Latin. According to law; by right.
debacle (dih BAK ul)
1. A sudden, disastrous
collapse, downfall, or defeat;
a rout.
2. A total, often ludicrous
failure.
decimate (DESS ih mate)
1. To select by lot and kill one
in every ten of.
2. To destroy or kill a large
part of (a group).
decipher (dih SYE fur)
To read or interpret
ambiguous, obscure, or
illegible matter; decode.
defalcate (dih FALL kate)
To misuse funds; embezzle.
deflagrate (DEF lah grate)
To cause to burn with great
heat and light.
deflections
Grammatical procedures.
deify (DAY uh fye)
1. To idealize; exalt.
2. To make a god of; raise to
the condition of a god.
deign (dane)
1. To think it appropriate to
ones dignity; condescend.
2. To condescend to give or
grant; vouchsafe.
deja vu (DAY zha voo)
French. The illusion of having
already experienced something
actually being experienced for
the first time.
deliberate (dih LIB ur it)
1. Premeditated.
2. Arising from or marked by
careful consideration.
3. Done with or marked by full
consciousness of the nature
and effects; intentional.
4. Unhurried in action,
movement, or manner, as if
trying to avoid error.
(dih LIB uh rate)
1. To think carefully and often
slowly, as about a choice to be
made.
2. To consider (a matter)
carefully and often slowly, as
by weighing alternatives.
demography
(dih MOG ruh fee)
The study of characteristics of
52
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disconcert
1. To upset the self-possession
of; ruffle.
2. To frustrate (plans, for
example) by throwing into
disorder; disarrange.
discount
1. The interest deducted
prior to purchasing, selling, or
lending a commercial paper;
the discount rate.
2. A reduction from the full
or standard amount of a price
or debt.
discourse
1. A formal, lengthy discussion
of a subject, either written or
spoken.
2. Verbal expression in speech
or writing.
3. Verbal exchange;
conversation.
dispelling
1. To rid ones mind of.
2. To drive away or off by or as
if by scattering.
disperse (dis PURS)
1. a. To drive off or scatter
in different directions. b. To
strew or distribute widely.
2. To cause to vanish or
disappear.
3. To disseminate (knowledge,
for example).
disquietude
(dis KWY uh tyood)
Worried unease; anxiety.
doctrine
A principle or body of
principles presented for
acceptance or belief, as by a
religious, political, scientific,
or philosophic group; dogma.
dogma
1. Theology. A doctrine or a
corpus of doctrines relating
to matters such as morality
and faith, set forth in an
authoritative manner by a
church.
2. An authoritative principle,
belief, or statement of ideas
or opinion, especially one
considered to be absolutely
true.
du jour (doo ZHOOR)
French. Of the Day.
E
ebb
To fall away or back; decline
or recede.
ebullient (ih BULL yunt)
Zestfully enthusiastic.
endomorph
A person with shortness of
stature and broadness of girth
with powerful muscularity.
ennui (on WEE or EN wee)
Listlessness and dissatisfaction
resulting from lack of interest;
boredom.
enterprise
1. An undertaking, especially
one of some scope,
complication, and risk.
2. A business organization.
3. Willingness to undertake
new ventures; initiative.
entities
1. Something that exists as a
particular and discrete unit.
2. The existence of something
considered apart from its
properties.
epitaph (EP uh taf)
1. An inscription on a
tombstone in memory of the
one buried there.
2. A brief literary piece
commemorating a deceased
person.
epitome (ih PIT uh mee)
1. A representative or an
example of a class or type.
2. A brief summary, as of a
book or an article; an abstract.
erubescent (er oo BES unt)
Red-skinned; blushed; flushed.
erudite (ER yoo dite)
Deeply learned.
escrow (ES kro)
Money, property, a deed, or
a bond put into the custody
of a third party for delivery
to a grantee only after the
fulfillment of the conditions
specified.
esculent (ES kyuh lent)
Suitable for eating; edible.
esurient (ih SYUR ee unt)
Hungry; greedy.
et al
Latin. And other.
et cetera
Latin. And other unspecified
things of the same class; and
so forth.
et tu Brute?
(et TOO broo TAY?)
Latin. And you Brutus? Said of
or to traitors.
ethnocentrism
1. Belief in the superiority of
ones own ethnic group.
2. Overriding concern with
race.
53
2. To eliminate completely;
annihilate.
expurgate (EK spur gate)
1. To cleanse of something
morally harmful.
2. To expunge erroneous,
vulgar, obscene, or otherwise
objectionable material (from
a book, for example) before
publication.
extol (ik STOLE)
To praise highly; exalt.
F
Falstaff
A lovable and interesting
buffoon of Shakespeares
creation.
fawning
To ingratiate and seek favor
or attention by flattery and
obsequious behavior.
fealty (FEEL tee)
1. a. The fidelity owed by a
vassal to his feudal lord. b. The
oath of such fidelity.
2. Faithfulness; allegiance.
fecund (FEE cund)
1. Marked by intellectual
productivity.
2. Capable of producing
offspring or vegetation;
fruitful.
fen
Low, flat, swampy land; a bog
or marsh.
fey
1. a. Having or displaying an
otherworldly aspect or quality.
b. Having visionary power;
clairvoyant. c. Appearing
touched or crazy, as if under
a spell.
filched
To take something (especially
something of little value) in a
furtive manner; snitch.
finagle (fuh NAY gul)
1. To obtain or achieve by
indirect, usually deceitful
methods.
2. To cheat; swindle. To use
crafty, deceitful methods.
flatulent (FLAT yoo lunt)
1. Pompous; bloated.
2. Afflicted with intestinal gas.
florid (FLOR ud)
Flushed with rosy color; ruddy.
flux
1. a. A flow or flowing. b. A
continued flow; a flood.
2. To flow; stream.
3. Change; fluctuation.
fold
1. a. A group of people or
institutions bound together by
common beliefs and aims. b. A
religious congregation.
2. A flock.
font
A complete set of type of one
size and face.
forbear
1. To refrain from; resist.
2. To desist from; cease.
3. To hold back; refrain.
4. To be tolerant or patient in
the face of provocation.
formidable
(FOR muh duh bul)
1. Arousing fear, dread, or
alarm.
2. Inspiring awe, admiration,
or wonder.
3. Difficult to undertake,
surmount, or defeat.
foudroyant (foo DROY unt)
Thundering; dazzling.
franchise
1. The granting of certain
rights and powers to a
corporation.
2. a. Authorization granted to
someone to sell or distribute a
companys goods or services in
a certain area. b. A business or
group of businesses established
or operated under such
authorization.
3. A professional sports team.
Freudian (FROYD ee un)
Relating to the psychoanalytic
theories or practices of
Sigmund Freud.
fructuous (FRUK chuh wus)
Fruitful.
fulminate (FULL mih nate)
1. To issue a thunderous verbal
attack or denunciation.
G
gaffe (gaf)
1. A clumsy social blunder; a
faux pas.
2. A blatant mistake or
misjudgment.
gash
Knowing; witty.
germane (jer MAYNE)
Being both pertinent and
fitting.
Gesundheit (guh ZUNT hite)
German. Used to wish good
health to a person who has just
sneezed.
Gettysburg Address
Abraham Lincolns famous
speech at the Gettysburg,
Pennsylvania, Cemetery in
1863.
Godspeed
A farewell meaning God speed
you; God prosper you.
Gongoristic
A literary style characterized
by studied obscurity and by use
of various ornate devices.
Goodbye
Used to express good wishes
when parting or at the end of a
a conversation.
gravity
1. Grave consequence;
seriousness or importance.
2. Solemnity or dignity of
manner.
grig
A lively person.
grimace (GRIM us)
A sharp contortion of the face
expressive of pain, contempt,
disgust, or disapproval.
gusto
Vigorous enjoyment; zest.
guten Tag
German. Good Day.
H
hail
1. a. To salute or greet.
b. To greet or acclaim
enthusiastically.
2. To call out to in order to
catch the attention of.
handsel
A small gift to inaugurate an
enterprise with good luck.
hasp
A metal fastener with a hinged,
slotted part that fits over a
staple and is secured by a pin,
bolt, or padlock.
hebetudinous
(heb uh TYOOD ih nus)
Dull; lethargic.
hedonism (HEED un izum)
1. The ethical doctrine holding
that only what is pleasant or
has pleasant consequences is
intrinsically good.
2. Pursuit of or devotion to
pleasure, especially to the
pleasures of the senses.
heuristic (hyoo RIS tik)
1. Of or relating to a usually
speculative formulation serving
as a guide in the investigation
54
or solution of a problem.
2. Of, relating to, or
constituting an educational
method in which learning
takes place through discoveries
that result from investigations
made by the student.
hiatus (hye ATE us)
A gap or an interruption in
space, time, or continuity; a
break.
hobble (HOB bul)
To hamper the action or
progress of; impede.
hobbledehoy
(HOB ble dee hoy)
An awkward, gawky youth; a
young clumsy boy.
hola
Spanish. Hello.
hominines (HOM uh nines)
Human beings.
Homo sapiens
(ho mo SAY pee enz)
Latin. The modern species of
human beings; the only extant
species of the primate family
Hominidae.
homograph
One of two or more words
that have the same spelling but
differ in origin, meaning, and
sometimes pronunciation.
homonym
One of two or more words
that have the same sound and
often the same spelling but
differ in meaning.
homophone
One of two or more words,
such as censer and censor, that
are pronounced the same but
differ in meaning, origin, and
sometimes spelling.
Horatio Alger (AL jer)
An influential writer of success
stories for boys.
hovel (HAWV ul)
A small, miserable dwelling.
Humpty Dumpty
A personified egg in Lewis
Carrolls Alice Through the
Looking Glass.
hustings
A place where political
campaign speeches are made.
I
icon (EYE kon)
1. An image; a representation.
2. One who is the object of
great attention and devotion;
an idol.
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inept
1. Not apt or fitting;
inappropriate.
2. a. Displaying a lack of
judgment, sense, or reason;
foolish. b. Bungling or clumsy;
generally incompetent.
infallible
Incapable of erring or failing.
ingrate
An ungrateful person.
inherent (in HIR unt)
Existing as an essential
constituent or characteristic;
intrinsic.
insipid
Lacking excitement,
stimulation, or interest; dull.
interlude (IN ter lood)
1. An intervening episode,
feature, or period of time.
2. An entertainment between
the acts of a play.
3. A short piece inserted
between the parts of a longer
composition.
intermediary
1. One that acts as an agent
between persons or things; a
mediator.
2. Existing or occurring
between; intermediate.
3. An intermediate state or
stage.
irrevocable
Impossible to retract or
revoke.
J
jape
To joke or quip.
jejune (jih JOON)
Lacking maturity; childish.
joie de vivre
(zhwad uh VEEVRUH)
French. Joy of living; keen
enjoyment of life.
juncture
1. A point in time, especially a
critical point.
2. The transition or mode of
transition from one sound to
another in speech.
Jutes
Members of a Germanic tribe
who invaded and conquered
England in the fifth century
A.D.
juxtaposition
(JUK stuh puh zish un)
An instance of placing two or
more objects side by side.
K
karma
1. Hinduism & Buddhism.
The total effect of a persons
actions and conduct during
the successive phases of the
persons existence, regarded
as determining the persons
destiny.
2. Fate; destiny.
3. A distinctive aura,
atmosphere, or feeling.
ken
Perception; understanding.
knur (nur)
A hard excrescence; a knot.
L
labyrinth (LAB uh rinth)
An intricate structure of
interconnecting passages
through which it is difficult to
find ones way; a maze.
lachrymose
(LACK ruh mose)
Mournful; weeping or inclined
to weep; tearful.
laissez faire (LES a fayre)
French. A doctrine opposing
governmental interference in
economic affairs. A marketbased economy.
lank
Long and lean.
Latinate
Of, resembling, relating to, or
derived from Latin; from the
Latin.
legacy (LEG uh see)
1. Money or property
bequeathed to another by will;
bequest.
2. Something handed down
from an ancestor or a
predecessor or from the past.
lexicon
1. A dictionary.
2. A stock of terms used in a
particular profession, subject,
or style; a vocabulary.
lilt
1. A cheerful or lively manner
of speaking, in which the pitch
of the voice varies pleasantly.
2. A light, happy tune or song.
3. A light or resilient manner
of moving or walking.
lingua franca
1. Language of the Franks.
2. Something resembling a
common language.
55
listlessness
Lacking energy or disinclined
to exert effort; lethargic.
lithic (LITH ik)
Relating to stone.
lode
1. A rich source or supply.
2. a. The metalliferous ore
that fills a fissure in a rock
formation. b. A vein of mineral
ore deposited between clearly
demarcated layers of rock.
lollapalooza
A whopper; wild and
unbridled; the biggest and the
best.
lop
1. To cut off (a part) from;
trim.
2. To eliminate or excise as
superfluous.
lucrative (LOOK ruh tiv)
Producing wealth; profitable.
M
Machiavellianism
(mok ee uh VEL ee un iz um)
The political doctrine of
Machiavelli which denies
the relevance of morality in
political affairs.
machinations
(mok ih NAY shuns)
Plots and hostile intrigues.
Magna Carta
(MAG nuh KAR tuh)
The great charter of English
political and civil liberties
granted in 1215 A.D.
magnanimous
(mag NAN uh mus)
1. Courageously noble in mind
and heart.
2. Generous in forgiving;
eschewing resentment or
revenge; unselfish.
magnum opus
(MAG nuh MOH pus)
Latin. The great work of an
artist or writer.
manumit (man yoo MIT)
To free from slavery or
bondage; emancipate.
martinet (mart un ET)
1. A rigid military
disciplinarian.
2. One who demands absolute
adherence to forms and rules.
masticate
To chew.
maze
1. Something made up of
moot
1. Subject to debate; arguable.
2. a. Law. Without legal
significance, through having
been previously decided or
settled. b. Of no practical
importance; irrelevant.
mores (MORE ayes)
1. The accepted traditional
customs and usages of a
particular social group.
2. Moral attitudes.
3. Manners; ways.
moue (moo)
A small grimace; a pout.
muck
1. A moist, sticky mixture,
especially of mud and filth.
2. Moist farmyard dung;
manure.
multisyllabic
(multi syl LA bik)
Many syllables.
mundane
1. Of, relating to, or typical of
this world; secular.
2. Relating to, characteristic
of, or concerned with
commonplaces; ordinary.
N
nest-ce pas (nay say pah)
French. Is it not so?
namaste
Hindi. A warm respectful
greeting.
nascent (nay sent)
Coming into existence;
emerging.
neophyte (NEE oh fyt)
1. A recent convert to a belief;
a proselyte.
2. A beginner or novice.
neuronal
Pertaining to any of the
impulse-conducting cells that
constitute the brain, spinal
column, and nerves.
neurotic (nyur OT ik)
1. Overanxious and
overemotional.
2. Of, relating to, derived
from, or affected with a
nervous disorder.
nihilistic (nye ul ISS tik)
The belief that the destruction
of existing political or social
institutions is necessary for
future improvement.
node
A knob, knot, protuberance,
or swelling.
O
oblivion (uh BLIV ee un)
The condition or quality of
being completely forgotten.
oblivious
Lacking conscious awareness;
unmindful.
obscure (ob SKYOO UR)
1. Not readily noticed or seen;
inconspicuous.
2. Of undistinguished or
humble station or reputation.
3. Not clearly understood
or expressed; ambiguous or
vague.
obstreperous
(ob STREP uh rus)
1. Noisily and stubbornly
defiant.
2. Aggressively boisterous.
ode
A lyric poem of some length,
usually of a serious or
meditative nature.
odious (OH dee us)
Arousing or meriting strong
dislike, aversion, or intense
displeasure.
ogle (OHG ul)
To stare in an impertinent,
flirtatious, or amorous manner.
56
open sesame
(open SES uh mee)
Something that unfailingly
brings about a desired end.
opine (oh PYNE)
To hold or state as an opinion.
oracular (oh RACK yuh lur)
Relating to the wise sayings of
an oracle or prophet.
orthodox
Adhering to what is commonly
accepted, customary, or
traditional.
ostentation
Pretentious display meant
to impress others; boastful
showiness.
otiose (OH shee ose)
1. Lazy; indolent.
2. Ineffective; futile.
P
paleolithic
(pay lee uh LITH ik)
Of, belonging to, or
designating the cultural period
beginning with the earliest
chipped stone tools, about
750,000 years ago.
pandemic (pan DEM ik)
Widespread; general.
panegyric (pan uh JIRE ik)
1. Elaborate praise or
laudation; an encomium.
2. A formal eulogistic
composition intended as a
public compliment.
par excellence
(par ek suh LONS)
French. The best or truest of a
kind; quintessential.
paradox
1. A seemingly contradictory
statement that may
nonetheless be true.
2. One exhibiting inexplicable
or contradictory aspects.
paragon
A model of excellence or
perfection of a kind; a peerless
example.
paramount
1. Above all others.
2. Of chief concern or
importance.
3. Supreme in rank, power, or
authority.
parenthetical
Set off within or as if within
parentheses; qualifying or
explanatory.
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effervescent.
2. Penetrate.
3. To make (coffee) in a
percolator.
peripatetic
(pare uh puh TET ik)
1. Upper case P; Relating
to the philosophy or teaching
methods of Aristotle, who
conducted discussions while
walking about in the Lyceum
of ancient Athens.
2. Lower case p; Walking
about or from place to place;
traveling on foot.
perseverance
(pur suh VIR unts)
Steady persistence in adhering
to a course of action, a belief,
or a purpose; steadfastness.
persnickety (pur SNIK uh tee)
1. a. Overparticular about
trivial details; fastidious. b.
Snobbish; pretentious.
2. Requiring strict attention to
detail; demanding.
perspicuous
(pur SPIK yuh wus)
Clearly expressed or
presented; easy to understand.
peruse (pur OOZE)
To read or examine, typically
with great care.
petrious
Rock-like.
petulant (PECH yoo lunt)
1. Unreasonably irritable or
ill-tempered; peevish.
2. Contemptuous in speech or
behavior.
philharmonic
A symphony orchestra or the
group that supports it.
pickings
1. Leftovers.
2. A share of spoils.
piece de resistance
(pee US duh ruh zee
STAUNTS)
French. An outstanding item.
pinnacle (PIN nuh cul)
The highest point; the
culmination.
pivotal (PIV uh tul)
Being of vital or central
importance; crucial.
polyandry (POL ee ann dree)
The condition or practice of
having more than one husband
at one time.
polyglot (POL ee glot)
1. A mixture or confusion of
languages.
57
Q
qua (kwah)
Italian. In the capacity or
character of.
quest (kwest)
The act or instance of seeking
or pursuing something; a
search.
quintessential
(kwin tuh SEN shal)
The essence of a thing in its
purest and most concentrated
form.
quip (kwip)
1. A clever, witty remark often
prompted by the occasion.
2. A clever, often sarcastic
remark; a gibe.
3. To make a quip.
quirk (kwurk)
A peculiarity of behavior; an
idiosyncrasy; an eccentricity.
quitclaim
To renounce all claim to a
possession or right.
quixotic (kwix SAH tik)
1. From Cervantes character
Don Quixote, caught up in
the romance of noble deeds
and the pursuit of unreachable
goals; idealistic without regard
to practicality.
2. Capricious; impulsive;
extravagantly chivalrous.
quotidian (kwo TID ee un)
Everyday; commonplace.
R
raconteur (rack on TUR)
One who tells stories and
anecdotes with skill and wit.
rail
To revile, scold, or castigate
in harsh, insolent, or abusive
language.
rapacious (ruh PAY shus)
Greedy; ravenous; voracious;
grasping.
rasp
1. To utter in a grating voice.
2. To file or scrape with
a coarse file having sharp
projections.
ratiocinate
(rash ee OH sun ate)
To reason methodically and
logically.
rationale (rash uh NAL)
1. Fundamental reasons; the
basis.
2. An exposition of principles
or reasons.
rationalize
To attribute (ones actions)
to rational and creditable
motives without analysis of
true, especially unconscious
motives.
recidivate; [from recidivism]
(rih SID uh vate)
A tendency to relapse into a
previous condition or mode of
behavior.
reciprocal (rih SIP ruh kul)
1. Mutually corresponding.
2. Interchangeable;
complementary.
3. Performed, experienced, or
felt by both sides.
recondite (REK un dite)
1. Concealed; hidden.
2. Not easily understood;
abstruse.
reconnaissance
(rih KON uh suns)
An inspection or exploration
of an area, especially one made
to gather military information.
rectitude (REK tuh tyood)
1. Moral uprightness;
righteousness.
2. The quality or condition of
being correct in judgment.
remunerate
(rih MYOO nuh rate)
1. To pay (a person) a suitable
equivalent in return for goods
provided, services rendered, or
losses incurred; recompense;
render.
2. To give in return or
retribution.
3. To give what is due or owed.
replete (rih PLEET)
1. Abundantly supplied;
abounding.
2. Fat; stout.
3. Filled to satiation; gorged.
repondez sil vous plait
(ree pon dez see voo play)
French. Please reply.
reprehend
To reprove; censure.
repugnant (rih PUG nunt)
Arousing disgust or aversion;
offensive or repulsive.
requisite (REK wuh zut)
Required; essential. Something
that is indispensable; a
requirement.
retention
1. To keep in possession or
use.
2. An ability to recall or
recognize what has been
learned or experienced;
memory.
rife (ryf)
1. In widespread existence,
practice, or use; increasingly
prevalent.
2. Abundant or numerous.
ritzy
Elegant; fancy.
roue (roo A)
A rake; a womanizer.
ruminate (ROO muh nate)
1. To muse upon; contemplate.
2. To reflect on over and over
again.
S
salaam (suh LAHM)
A respectful ceremonial
greeting performed especially
in Islamic countries.
salacious (suh LAY shus)
Appealing to or stimulating
sexual desire; lascivious;
lustful.
saltation
In the act of leaping or
bounding.
sans souci
(SAHN soosee)
French. Without care.
sans (sanz)
Without.
sapid (SAP ud)
Agreeable to the mind;
pleasant; inspiring.
sapient (SAP ee unt)
Having great wisdom and
discernment.
savant (suh VONT)
A learned person; a scholar;
a sage.
saw
A familiar saying; a bromide.
Saxons
A member of a West Germanic
tribal group that inhabited
northern Germany and
invaded Britain in the fifth and
sixth centuries A.D. with the
Angles and Jutes.
sayonara
Japanese. Goodbye.
Scaramouch
(skar uh MOOSH)
A stock character in Italian
comedy who is a buffoon and a
rascal; a scamp.
scintillate (SIN tul layt)
1. Twinkle and flash.
2. To throw off sparks.
3. To sparkle or shine.
4. To be animated and
brilliant.
scope
1. Extent of treatment or
opportunity.
2. The range of ones
perceptions, thoughts, or
actions.
3. Breadth or opportunity to
function.
4. The area covered by a given
activity or subject.
screed
A long monotonous harangue
or piece of writing.
seep
1. To pass slowly through small
openings or fine pores; ooze.
2. To enter, depart, or become
diffused gradually.
seminal
1. Highly influential in an
original way; constituting or
providing a basis for further
development.
2. Of, relating to, or having the
power to originate; creative.
sensory
1. Afferent.
2. Transmitting impulses from
sense organs to nerve centers;
3. Of or relating to the senses
or sensation.
58
sententious
1. Terse and energetic in
expression; pithy.
2. a. Abounding in pompous
moralizing. b. Given to
pompous moralizing and
aphorisms.
sequacious (sih KWAY shus)
Intellectually servile;
subservient.
sequester (sih KWES tur)
1. To remove or set apart;
segregate.
2. To cause to withdraw into
seclusion or isolation.
serendipity
The faculty of making
fortunate discoveries by
accident.
sesquipedalian
(ses kwuh puh DAYL yun)
A long word; polysyllabic.
shalom (shah LOME)
Used as a traditional Jewish
greeting or farewell.
Siam (sy AM)
Former name for Thailand.
simile (SIM uh lee)
A figure of speech in which
two essentially unlike things
are compared, often in a
phrase introduced by like or
as, as in cheeks like roses.
sine qua non
(sin ee kwa NOHN)
Latin. An absolutely essential
and indispensable thing.
situational
1. The combination of
circumstances at a given
moment; a state of affairs.
2. a. The way in which
something is positioned vis-vis its surroundings. b. The
place in which something is
situated; a location.
3. Position or status with
regard to conditions and
circumstances.
skitter
To move rapidly along a
surface, usually with frequent
light contacts or changes of
direction; skip or glide quickly.
sobriquet (SOH brih kay)
1. A fanciful name or
nickname.
2. An affectionate or
humorous nickname.
3. An assumed name.
sociolinguists
Those who study a language in
the context of a given society
or culture.
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sublime
1. a. Of high spiritual, moral,
or intellectual worth. b. Not to
be excelled; supreme.
2. Inspiring awe; impressive;
an ultimate example.
3. Characterized by nobility;
majestic.
suborn (suh BORN)
To induce secretly to commit
an unlawful or evil act; to
commit perjury.
substantive
(sub STUN tiv)
1. Of or relating to the essence
or substance; essential.
2. Independent in existence or
function; not subordinate.
3. Substantial; considerable.
summit
1. The highest point or part;
the top.
2. The highest level or degree
that can be attained.
summum bonum
(sum um BO num)
Latin. The highest or supreme
good.
superfluous
(soo PUR fluh wus)
Being beyond what is required
or sufficient.
supersede
1. To take the place of; replace.
2. To cause to be set aside,
especially to displace as
inferior or antiquated.
suppress
1. To keep from being
revealed, published, or
circulated.
2. To deliberately exclude
(unacceptable desires or
thoughts) from the mind.
3. To curtail or prohibit the
activities of.
4. To put an end to forcibly;
subdue.
surveillance (sur VAY lunts)
1. Close observation or
supervision of a person or
group, especially one under
suspicion.
2. The act of observing or the
condition of being observed.
sycophant (SIK uh funt)
A servile self-seeker who
attempts to win favor by
flattering influential people.
synchronize (SIN krun ize)
1. To operate in unison.
2. To cause to occur or operate
at the same time as something
else.
T
tabula rasa
(TAB yuh luh rahz uh)
Latin. Blank slate; empty mind.
tarn
1. A small mountain lake,
especially one formed by
glaciers.
2. Southern U.S.: A swampy
pond.
temerarious
(tem uh RARE ee us)
Marked by temerity; reckless;
brash.
temporize
1. To engage in discussions or
negotiations, especially so as
to achieve a compromise or
gain time.
2. To act evasively in order to
gain time, avoid argument, or
postpone a decision.
3. To yield to current
circumstances or necessities;
act to suit the time.
tenacious
1. Clinging to another object
or surface; adhesive.
2. Holding together firmly;
cohesive.
3. Holding or tending to hold
persistently to something, such
as a point of view.
tenure (TEN yoor)
1. The status of holding ones
position on a permanent basis
without periodic contract
renewals.
2. a. The act, fact, or condition
of holding something in ones
possession, as real estate or an
office; occupation. b. A period
during which something is
held.
teratogenies
Little monsters.
thespian
An actor or actress.
Thoreau
Henry David Thoreau;
Influential American writer
and philosopher.
59
till
1. Variation of until.
2. A drawer, small chest, or
compartment for money, as in
a store.
3. To prepare (land) for the
raising of crops, as by plowing
and harrowing; cultivate.
timorous
Full of apprehensiveness;
timid.
tor
1. A high rock or pile of rocks
on the top of a hill.
2. A high craggy hill.
torpor
1. Lethargy; apathy;
sluggishness.
2. A state of mental or physical
inactivity or insensibility.
touchstone
1. A hard black stone, such
as jasper or basalt, formerly
used to test the quality of gold
or silver by comparing the
streak left on the stone by one
of these metals with that of a
standard alloy.
2. An excellent quality or
example that is used to test
the excellence or genuineness
of others.
tour de force
(too duh FORS)
French. 1. A feat of strength,
skill, or ingenuity.
2. A feat requiring great
virtuosity or strength, often
deliberately undertaken for its
difficulty.
tout de suite (toot sweet)
French. Immediately; right away.
transmission
1. a. The act or process of
transmitting. b. The fact of
being transmitted.
2. Something, such as a
message, that is transmitted.
3. The sending of a signal,
picture, or other information
from a transmitter.
4. A gearbox.
transmogrify
To change into a different
shape or form, especially one
that is fantastic or bizarre.
transpose
1. To reverse or transfer the
order or place of; interchange.
2. To alter in form or nature;
transform.
traverse
1. To travel or pass across,
over, or through.
U
ululate (UL yuh late)
To howl, wail, or lament
loudly.
umbrage (UM brij)
Offense; resentment.
unequivocal
Admitting of no doubt or
misunderstanding; clear and
unambiguous.
unremitting
Never slackening; persistent.
usufruct (YOO zuh frukt)
Law: The right to use
and enjoy the profits and
advantages of something
belonging to another as long as
the property is not damaged or
altered in any way.
usurp (yoo SURP)
1. To seize and hold by force
V
vacillate (VAS uh late)
To swing indecisively from one
course of action or opinion to
another.
vacuous (VAK yuh wus)
1. a. Lacking intelligence;
stupid. b. Devoid of substance
or meaning; inane.
2. Devoid of expression;
vacant.
3. Lacking serious purpose or
occupation; idle.
4. Devoid of matter; empty.
vagabond
A vagrant; a tramp; a
wanderer; a rover.
vale
A valley, often coursed by a
stream; a dale.
veracious (vuh RAY shus)
Honest; truthful; accurate;
precise.
veracity
1. Adherence to the truth;
truthfulness.
2. Conformity to fact or truth;
accuracy or precision.
verily (VARE uh lee)
1. In truth; in fact.
2. With confidence; assuredly.
verisimilitude
(vare uh suh MI li tyood)
The quality of appearing to be
true or real.
veritable (VARE ut uh bul)
Actual; true; authentic;
genuine.
vernacular
1. The everyday language
spoken by a people as
distinguished from the literary
language.
2. The idiom of a particular
trade or profession.
3. The standard native
language of a country or
locality.
versatile (VUR sut ul)
1. Having varied uses or
serving many functions.
2. Capable of doing many
things competently.
3. Variable or inconstant;
changeable.
vertex (VUR teks)
The highest point; the apex or
summit.
vex
1. To cause perplexity in;
puzzle.
2. To bring distress or suffering
to; plague or afflict.
3. To annoy, as with petty
importunities; bother.
vie
To strive for victory or
superiority; contend.
vignette (vin YET)
A short, usually descriptive
literary sketch.
vim
Ebullient vitality and energy.
viridescent (vere uh DES sent)
Green or slightly green.
vitiate (VISH ee ate)
1. To reduce the value
or impair the quality of;
contaminate.
2. To corrupt morally; debase.
3. To make ineffective;
invalidate; weaken.
vitreous (VIH tree us)
Of, relating to, resembling,
or having the nature of glass;
glassy.
vituperate
(vye TYOO puh rate)
To rebuke or criticize harshly
or abusively; berate; rail.
vivacious (vuh VAY shus)
Full of animation and spirit;
lively.
voluptuous
(vuh LUP chuh wus)
Suggesting sensual pleasure by
fullness and beauty of form.
vouchsafe
To condescend to grant
or bestow (a privilege, for
example); to deign.
vow
1. An earnest promise to
perform a specified act or
behave in a certain manner.
2. To promise or threat
solemnly; pledge.
W
waif (wafe)
1. a. A homeless person,
especially a forsaken or
orphaned child. b. An
abandoned young animal.
2. Something found and
unclaimed, as an object cast up
by the sea.
Walden (WAL den)
Walden Pond in Northeast
Massachusetts, south of
Concord, where Thoreau
60
sequestered himself to
observe, ruminate, and write.
wen
A harmless cyst, especially on
the scalp or face.
whimsical
1. Erratic in behavior or
degree of unpredictability.
2. Determined by, arising
from, or marked by whim or
caprice.
wont (wahnt)
1. Accustomed or used to;
likely.
2. Customary practice; usage.
wry (ry)
Dryly humorous, often with a
touch of irony.
wunderkind (VUN dur kint)
German. A child prodigy; a
wonder kid.
X
xeno (ZEE no)
Indicates the presence of
something that is strange,
foreign, different, or
threatening a xenophobe is
afraid of strangers.
Y
yean (yeen)
To give birth.
yen
A strong desire or inclination;
a yearning or craving.
yokefellow
A work companion; comrade.
Z
zeal
1. Enthusiastic devotion to
a cause, an ideal, or a goal
and tireless diligence in its
furtherance.
2. A fanatically committed
person.
zen
Zen Buddhism, which
proclaims that enlightenment
is possible through meditation
and self-contemplation.
zenith (ZEE nith)
1. The point on the celestial
sphere that is directly above
the observer.
2. The upper region of the sky.
3. The point of culmination;
the peak.
zymurgy (ZY mur jee)
The branch of chemistry
that deals with fermentation
processes, as in brewing.
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61
62
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63
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64
J. Michael Bennett
For over two decades Dr. J. Michael Bennett served as a rhetoric professor at the University
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and How to Build a Power Vocabulary for the American Management Association, and Four Powers of
CommunicationSkills for Effective Learning for McGraw-Hill Publishing Company.
Dr. Bennett has been active in The International Reading Association, The National
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Your Million Dollar Vocabulary course is the second personal learning course authored by
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Michael, his wife Nancy, son Peter, and daughter Jacquelyn live in Cottage Grove,
Minnesota.
www.LearningStrategies.com
65
Notes:
66
Notes:
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